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Bee (Earlington, Ky.): October 12, 1899
Bee (Earlington, Ky.): October 12, 1899 Bee (Earlington, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Bee Publishing Co. Earlington, KY 1899 bee1899101201_sn87060004 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Bee (Earlington, Ky.): October 12, 1899 Bee (Earlington, Ky.) Bee Publishing Co. Earlington, KY 1899 $IMLS This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognitio n (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has be en done to the content of the original document. Encoding has been done through an automated process using the recommendations for Level 1 of the TEI in Librar ies Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file. ,U.. I "Jt.ii v ,. '. '- . LT. - J- ' -' ' r. S. f l - MB? h ; KM : . ill a - f V , '- fill " - . r. TENTH YEAR. CONVENTION V rYo TTUsmtn BjiBPfeVlu sw. t l"5w THE BOER ULTIMATUM. Is - .... J ff TWAS A i- v - '.""s EARLINGTON, HOPKINS COUNTY, KENTUCKY, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1899. IS A DECLARED OFF, 4 Nomination to be Hade in the First Railroad District. Order is Promulgated and Hopklnsville Convention Will Not Be Held. Nv K From Yesterday's Commercial. TUcxft will bo no nominal ion by t;Iio JlopublicaiiB for railroad commissioner in tho First district. Although a call had boon issued for it nominating convention tho call was withdrawn yesterday. State Central Committee Chairman 0. M. Bamott made 'the announcement. It appears that after tho call Was inado n poll of tho mombors of the First district committco developed'tliat thorp was a majority against tho plan and it was decided to cancel tho convention call. Tho Democratic majority in tha First railroad district is so larko that for Itomiblicaus to lnuRo a nomination is a mere formality without possibility of any favorable result to tho nominee. This is belioved to have caused tho decision against tho nominn- ' tion in that district. Tho first district committco in tho following manner addressed tho republicans of tho first railroad district: "Byordor of tho cominitte tho call for tho con- vonlion to meot at Ilopkiusvillo October 17, 1890, , on Tuesday, for tho purpose- of making a nomination for railroad commissioner has boon called ofT. V. J. DEBOE, Oliairman." Tho committco is composed of t tho chaimio'n of all congressional district's any jmrt of which lies within tho railroad district. Tho committco is, therefore, composed of tho chairmen of tho first, second, third, fourth and eleventh district committees. Tho change in plans loaves tho Democratic nominee. J. Fletcher Dempsoy. who will run ahead of Goebcl without Republican opposition. FIRE AT PROVIDENCE. lV.' AM. Colfman'a Ik ''ww "- 'XHty-tou- r Stable and llertea Burned. v" K - T. II ". 5 Pivne Lost Several Build- In With No Insurance. H 4 " f fM i - J'rovhlonco, Ivy., Oct. 11 (Siieclal) A tllsastrous lire occurred horolast nlKlit which destroyed tho livery Btnhlo and contuiits run by II. M. ColTinnn, mid iiohIoIIIco, meat shop niul olllco building adjoining. Tho llvnry building and all the other 'building burni'd were owned by T. II. 1'ayno. Tho livery stable equip-- horses, incut. Including twenty-fou- r which perlshod, was the nroporty of II. M. OotTmau. Tho stable bad been owned by WcKliiBtry and ColTman, but McK i UN try died recently and Air. UoiTinau'lind bought ids Interest for !(80t) cahIi. Cotfrnait will bo tho of n policy for $(i00,whlch had ibeeu Uriiieil to MoKlustry & Collinnn. 'Thin policy had not been transferred and thero is ii technicality In tho way of 1(h payment but ft is not y Uhought that tho lusurauco will rofuso to pay the looa. Am a rule tho flro Insurance do tho liberal thing under isuch circumstances. The origin of the lira is not known. Probably It started from a pipe spark ithat smouldered Into the hours of tho night. Two young men who iHlcpt in tho stable olllco had Just (time to Jump out of tho window after Uliey awakened. The contents of the postoftlce were . . saved. Mr. Pay no's homo and two other houses were badlv Bcorched mud had a narrow escape The fav ourable direction of tho wind was all that saved thorn, at there was practically no water with which to light bun-'cllcla- ry com-:j!nncom-jpaul- Hire. f.rK Pi- ?- 1v (ColTmau. Tho loss falls very heavily on Mr. Olney. sitlg-atnt- IX 3 -- . , IF-.- ., ;' f'"--- J . i . K l 7 . Y- iMs -- r V "59 i about the throat and arms. Everybody around hero Is hauling, water from tho river. A largo number of our citizens were in Madlsonvlllo last week at tending tho Ilowton trial. Newton Wyatt has had to dismiss Ids school at Freedom on account of bis illness. It. Jt. Haggard and wife, of Daltou, visited hero last week. Mr. Will Mercer and Miss Minnie Poole wero married in Mt. Vernon, Iud., last Thursday. The rivor is so low that tho grist mill cannot grind. W.J. Wells got his hand badly "burned last week. Hail Wlnstead has boon elected trusteo In district No. KJ. Wheat sdwltig is going slow on account of the dry weather. Mr. Samuel Poole is building a new .dwelling on his place near horo. Hoy Mercer is on tho sick list. Mrs. Susan Crisp is visiting her grandmother here. The election Is fast approaching, Hud that the count may snow sixteen Jlepubllcans to one Democrats Is the Onk op tun Hoys. wish of . Fox had dunce at Martin Olbbs' last veek and Fox Avas slightly cut ai-- C. Smith and-Luth- - lC ' " j New Business House. has contracted with Hall Bros'., and Lee Oldham for the y brick bust-neerection of a house upon tho site of the present frame structure he lias occupied on Railroad street. Ho is now moving his stock of goods into John Hide's bulldinnr which he will PlAMfotfC CUBAN OIL riucs Itov. Roscoo M. "Wheat is cx- occupy wlillo tho new house is beiug Ho . wont to Cuts, llnrn, Uralses, Itlicu- - Sectod homo today. to act as best man at tho built. Material for the new building matlsm Sores. Price, 25 cents. wedding of a proacher friend nfter and will ue ueuvereii auu ma worx uegun Soldliy St, Bernard Drug Store. ,tonce. conferenco closed. W. O. MoLood two-storw -- Occasion the Laying of tk( London, Oct. il. The stolidity, If not the placjdlty of tho English charCorner Stono of tho New acter, never was better shown ihan It Federal Building. Is in London when England Is face to face with war. fivi Although it Vtus only half-paPRESIDENT OFFICIATED, M'KINLEY o'clock yesterday when Mr. Chamberlain's secretary handed to n represent-othof the press the first' copy of the Laying Follovrad The Corner-Ston- e later br a Honitcr Military, Nnvnl anil Transvaal ultimatum, an hour news. Cltlo I'rurraalon, Which mi Re. every evening paper bad tho viewed lir the President mid Oili- There was not a trace of the excitement attendant upon the announceer UUtlnKulahed Visitor. ment of the result on the night aftn: , Chicago, Oct. 10, Sui rounded b) the tlrst raco for tho America's cup. men who guide the dlplomntle rein KiiRland Heallses tho Situation. Hour of three governments, and in th Hut thla must not be interpreted to presence of thousands of spectators mean that England Is not nlle to the President Win. McKlnley formally laid realities of the situation. The audacio the coi of the inngnlilcenl ty of tho Transvaal's dispatch momennew federal building of Chicago. The tarily stuns tho public, and It was only event ns the crowning feature of the when under the glare of the music ncck'n celebration marking the nnnuul hull lights, nnd listening to the stirobservance of Chicago nay. ring bars of the nntlonal nthem nnd other patriotic airs that the effect of the momentary rebuff was lost In demonstrations that shook tho rafter. Olilcera nnd Men Enthusiastic. The Army and Navy club, familiarly, known as the "Hag," has notor many i day seen such a gathering of campaigners as was there last nlghi. Xor was tho slowly aroused enthusl-isconfined to the officers. At Wellington barracks, where a battalion of grenadiers, which forms a portion of the First army corps,had Just returned from 10 months' service on the rock of Gibraltar, the enthusiasm knew no oounds. Seldom docs Tommy Atkins oermlt himself tho luxury of cnthnsl-ism- , but the regiment had had a long ipcll of dreary garrison duty, and hailed the call to active scnlcc with ichoolboy delight. rnBflinnNT wilmam m'kinlet. U Wilt Mot be a Picnic. The Streets l'neked. Underneath all, however, officers, Tiiig before the liorr s for the cct" the nnd civilians fmonlrs the streets Hurroundlng the lubalterns the Transiaal recognized will (act that campaign block on which the steel skeleton of a picnic, and the sober reality the new building fitnmls, were packed not be gtves f this a sterner note to London from curb to curb with pushing, Jostling people, anxious to get a life than nnything tbnt has occurred Kharglimpse of the nation's president nnd since the days of Gordon nnd the distinguished visitors from other toum. :oun tries. Almost Wiped Oat br Fire. A Hoar of Checrtnsr. Chicago, Oct. 11. Sir Wilfrid Laur-ler- , Shortly before ten o'clock a rear of premier of Canada, nnd other dis.herring down Jackson lxulcvard an- tinguished Canadians In the premier's nounced tho coming of 1'rciddent Mcparty, were guests of Canadian-American- a Klnley and his part'. yesterday nt an informal lunch-oAt the Union l.rngnr Clali. nt the Great Northern hotel. Over At tho entrance of the Union League :luli the president nnd the members i hundred guests were present. Tha it his party alighted, and after a brief guests began drinking the health o( eceptlon were escorted across Jackson President McKlnley and follow cd by ooulevnrd to tho platform in front of irlnklng like honor to Queen Victoria, with appropriate toasts. Sir Wilfrid '.he federal building. Then Judge Christian G Kohl-taa- Laurler responded to the toast "Canachairman of the commlttoa on da," nnd was frequently interrupted :eremonlcs, introduced Secretary of by npplausc. die Treasury Lyman J. Gage Ordered to Make Ilnste to Innlln. the Washington. Oct. 11. Actlng'Sccre-(ar-y Allen yesterday cancelled the orSecretary GaKft Cheered. ders to the gunboat Marietta to make Tho secretary was warmly cheered i survey of a dangerous shoal on the is he stepped forward and made the north coast of South America, nnd dipenlng address. the ship to proceed with disAt the conclusion of Secretary Oage's rected to Manila by way of the Suez patch Kev. Frank W. Qunsuu irlef address, been The suney work us olTcred a brief but Impressive pray-r- , eanal. over to the Dolphin. has turned the president and all the members The Newark will be ready to soil for s f Ids party uncovering as Dr. Marc Island within a Manila asked a blessing on the cere-non- w tek. from Secretary Cage introduced Tostmas-er-OencrIlecentlon to Uen. Harrison. Smith, He was also greet-- d nerlln, Oct. 11. Andrew D. White, with much applause, and made u United States ambassador to Germany, jrlef but patriotlo nddress. nnd Mrs. White gate a reception In . The Cnrner-Ston- e honor of Hon. HcnJ. Harrison and Mrs The actual ceremonies of the laying Harrison jesterday afternoon, which jtremcr, secretary of tho federal wns attended by about 200 members ol arose nnd formally announced tho Amerlcnn colony. The banquet hat the stone was ready, and read the hall was decorated with American 1st of articles placed within it. l'rca.-len- t ftaKK McKlnley was introduced by Secretary Gogc, nnd as the president Tn Gather Merhnnlenl Information Wnshlngton, Oct. 11. Director Mer-rlnItepped forward to recejc tho trowel nf the census has decided to 'rom the hands of Architect Henry (tea "Cobb, the crowds again burst appoint special agents tn :dl of the largest cities for employment not to 'orth into cheer after cheer, the not ceasing until the president exceed 0 to 40 days in gathering information only as to mechanics and abed his head. manufactures. President Wields the Trowrl. The president then stepped to the A Younir Woman murdered. tide of the uplifted moss of Illinois Lowell, Mass., Oct. 11, The body oi Imestone, and taking a trow elf nl of a young woman was found In n lonelj nortnr from the board, he threw It on place on Pawtucket street, near the .he base of the stone. An ho did so, Mcrrimac river, here, nt 2 o. in. She i band stationed In the rctlewlng had been strangled to death mid ths itand plaj ed "The Star Spangled Hau- police think the motive was criminal ler," and as the notes of the national assault. intliem were heard, tho crowd again Cession of DelnKon liny. sroke into cheers, the noise almost London, Oct. 11. It is reported that irowntng the music. President McKlnley then pronounced tho ntonc set, at the coming session of parliament ind resumed his seat as the workmen formal announcement will be made oi the cession of Dclngoa Hay and the icttled the stone In Its place. surrounding territory In Portuguese Senator Win. K. Mason wns next The nnd mnde n brief address on East Africa to Great Britain. sehalf of tho city of Chicago. The price is said to be 8,000,000. ercnionlcs ronclurd with the offer-n- g On the Itctlrcd List. of benediction hy Dr. Ounsaulus. Washington, Oct. 11. McKlnley nnd party then President Henry L. Ilowlson was placed on the irose, nnd were again escorted across navy yesterday by he boulevard to the Union League retired list of tho on account of age dub, where Ihe president was the operation of law committee at Ho will make his residence In New fucst of the fedi-rauncheon, after which they ret lowed York city. ,he grand Chicago day parade. Fever Slowly Decreasing. In the evening the president was Key West, Oct. 11. There were 23 he guest of honor at the Chicago day new cases of yellow fecr yesterday anquct nt tho Auditorium and one death. The weather is becomMarlscal of Mexico nnd ing slightly cooler nnd the feter is premier Laurler of Canada were also slowly decreasing. iraong the distinguished guests. Reed In Washington. "Chlcneo Smith" Dcnil. Washington, Oct. 9. London, Oct. 10. Georgo Smith, bet-XThomas B. Reed arrived In Washing-Ioknow as 'Chicago" Smith, one of last night. Ho declined to discuss Jie richest men In England, died, oolltlcs, saying he was here to remote Hcform club, his iome of his private belongings. night, at the lome for many years. He was 02 years Yellow Fever at Ker West. )f age, and waB worth $10,000,000, Key West, Tin., Oct, 8. There were nade largely In Chicago real cstnte. 24 new cases of yellow fever reported The I.ason Ulocknde. In the last 81 hours, and three deaths. Washington, Oct. 10. It Is confident-- y Dewey and Party at nurllngtou. asserted that such n strict blockndo Burlington, Vt,, Oct. 11. Admiral f Luzon wlU be malntnlncd by Wntson that the rillpiuos will Dewey nnd party arrived here shortly lot be able (o renew their supplies of before, four o'clock yesterday and were ill ben nt once to Dr. Webb's resident a nijiihloiiH of war and food. Bllllo Hewlett is reported as imQuito a number of tho school girls proving after a sovoro Illness of somo paid tills olllco a plonsnut call Wedweeks. nesday afternoon. Todaa Plillllnu wilt trn fn TTmiilnr. Jnck B. Mooro, of Ilopklnsville, son Monday to attorn" Grand Lodgo HIUUMIIgB Ul tllU JVlllftllU, ui ionium. special agent for tho Hanover Fire Insurance Company, wns in Earl- l.trrlsit, ifnala.ilm, .ilnnliin. Fiscal Court convoned Tuesday of for his Company with nil nmiiiAi Paul M. this week for its regularly quartorly juoorc. session. The to-dae ner-ntonn t, er Clun-lauluI.nj-lnRcom-nltteItear-Admir! ei T n Sat-inlHcar-dmlrnl U NO. 41 IN BO. Wsr rrsctlcKllCertsln.snd the Ileipoa tlbllltr For It Falls Upon Krncer. LNI II 11. Anto-ILL, Anniversary of the Celebrated Dellum Debate Between the Two Western Giants. INTERESTING DAY AT GALESBURG iriBSOMJIEIvtouRE Mokes the food more delicious and wholesome worn mtma POwttw co , new youii VA LUkino WVByBs. OHEfiWISifl Powder UNNOTICED. Capf. Chndwick of the New York Presented with a Sword at Morgantown, W. Va. GALA DAY FOR THE LITTLE CITY. inni Henr-AdmliItear-Admirlicar-Admlr- al I'no YOU i want I onsimpikri? We are sure you do not. Nobody wants it. But It comes to many thousands every year. Itcomes to those who have had coughs and colds until the throat Is raw, and the lining membranes of the lungs are inflamed. Stop your cough when it first appears, and you remove the great danger of future trouble. mark during the ndmlnlstrntlon of President Harrison, where he spent the night. Hide Thronnh the City. In the carriage with President McKlnley were Col. Carr, Mayor Fletcher Carney, nnd Justice Alfred M. Crnlg, of ihc Illinois supreme court. Tho members of the cabinet, in company with Dr. John II. Finlcy, former president of Knox college, and other prominent citizens of Galesburg, followed In n long line of carriages. Everywhere slong the lino of inarch the enthusiasm of the people was unbounded, and when the college campus was reached the president received u verb command of Capt. Charles C. Craig, met Mr. McKlnley at the residence of rol. Clark H. Cnrr, minister to Den- HARLAN IS DEAD, Great Gathering on the Cnmiins ol Knox College that Listened to n lie Held Jinny Places of Honor anil Distinction In Ilotli Stntc and Ilrlrf Address by 1'rrslilent lie National Affairs. Klnlcy nnd nn Oration hy I'ost Inuster-GonerSmith. Des Moines, la., Oct. 7. The denth Galesburg, 111., Oct. 8. On the cam- of Jtatcs Senator Jame pus of historic KnoX college, where, 41 Harlan occurred nt his home in Mount years ago, Abraham Lincoln ami Pleasant, Thursday. The end was not Stephen A. Douglas met in one of n uncvpected, a collapse having taken memorable sertcs of debates to de- place last Sundny. The Immcdtnte termine which should occupy a sent in roftfe of the denth was congestion ol the United Stntos, Fresldcnt McKbi' th lungs, compllcAted with liver trou Charles ley nnd PostmnHtei-GciicnIn attending the Emory Smith delivered Stirling ad- ble. dresses commemorative of the contest session of the Iowa Methodist conbetween those two great leaders oi ference last week nggravated ills mala-dici- and caiised prostration. Ills former dajs. Citizens Turned Out Km SIiismp. laughter, the wife of Itobert T. Lin The citizens of Galesburg turned out :oht, of Chicago, was summoned frori en mussc to honor the president of the New York city, and was prefent nt the United States, and the members of his bedside. The funeral will probably be cabinet, and an opportunity was ghen held In Iowa Weslcynn chapel, in them to greet their distinguished guests os they were driven In carriages Mount Pleasant, on Sunday. through the streets of the city before the exercises nt the college begun The escort to the president, under A al il Over-cxertl- JAMES HARLAN. James Harlan was born In Clark county, 111., August 25, 1S20. He graduated at Indiana Asbury university In 1845, und (able ovation. a lawyer.. He was elected the first uincrlntcndent of Instruction of Iowa In Public Bxcrclses. The J5l, was president of Iowa Weslcynn exerCol. Carr presided oer the nt Mount Pleasant, In 1S53 Jin lowu nns States cises, and the Invocation was delivered ftom united 1M5, wassenator from the 1S53 to secretary of In Lincoln's second t.tolnct, by Dr. C. E. Nash, president of Lomand was again United States senator bard university. ioci Iowa from 1SC0 to 187X In 1U2 Mr Congressman George Xt. Frince wel- Harlan was appointed chief Justice of ilia urt of commissioners of Alabama comed the president to the Tenth :lnlm. which position ho held four years district, and the greeting on Ir, ISO! he was called from retirement to tempoi-vrchairman of tho llopub-lc4- i behalf of tho people of Illinois waa let asstate co ivcntlon. As such officer he Shelby M. Cullom. )iailc a speech which wleled a trememl-ju- s tpoken by Senator The brief speech of the president was nolt Influence in checking tho threatened of prohibition for practical local op republilistened to with the closest attention Jon, Ho wns n candidate for tho 1SXJ, can nomination for governor In but and punctuated throughout Its deliv- Us ago was acalnst him. He also served th outbursts of npplausc. is A member of tho Iowa Soldiers' and er) 4 lilacs' Monument commission, nnd wrs An Kloipient Tribute. prominent In tho councils of the Methodist Then followed the orntlou of the ihurch. Bemtor Harlan's wife died In 1SSI. Jaj, vhlch wns delivered by Fostmav ivas a remarkable woman, and during Bho tha Charles Emory Smith. Mr. tvll war did much to alleviate the of the Union soldiers, having eloquent tributes to the char-ici- ji limited pass from Secretary Stanton an Smith's to and hcrvlces of both Lincoln and .1 where she pleased. reminiscences of old Douglas, and his Will of the IJito Henry II. Plnnt. jajH In the old Illinois political nrenn New llnvcn, Oct. 9. Judge Lyndc were much npprcclatid by the im(lurilron, one of the executors of the mense crowds of listeners, some of (vlll of the Inle Henry 11. Plant, of New iv mil had been nmong the audiences nj eh, in li?SR, witnessed the political York, is nuthority for the statement tl,nt no proceedings have been taken nnrfare between the great emancipaocfore the probate court or by appeal tor nnd the champion of popular o the supctlor court tonttack the will, of the exercises, lie stated, however, that he had heard At the conclusion diortly beforo noon,, the presidential that tho widow was dissatisfied nnd 'lint It was her opinion ns a widow she parly boarded the train for Chicago. vas entitled to a larger portion of the ftnte than she receives under the will, Tilt INSURGENTS RETREATED. ludgc Harrison nlso stated thnt Morg ton lMant, the son, nad never said Auirrlrnn Troojis Under Gen. Sclurnn to him indicating that ho is 18G5-C- 1. al suf-crlner 1 any-'hbi- Oreupy Scleral oeletn nnd On lie Vlejo Hal lie I'oukIiI. in any manner with the pro-risle- made In the will. Noveletn, Island or Lwon, Oct. 8, 3:15 p. m. Uen. Schvvan's column, con slstlng of the Thirteenth Infantry, n battalion of the Fourteenth, two tioops of caviary, Cnpt. Hilej's battery of the Fi'th artillery nnd Lowe's scouts, nd wired from Ilncoor this mronlng nnd occupied Cnvlte Vlejo and Noveletn. The Ameilcan loss wns three officers nrd nine privates wounded, one of the of cers being mortally hurt. The lost of the enepiy Is unknown, but the s of three Filipinos were seen. Theic were two sharp fights neai Noveletn. Lowe's scouts flrbt en countered the enemy nenr Cavite Vlejo, and roon put Jhera to flight, con tinutng their advance. bo-lie- Dlssntlfled Auslrnllnns. Drlsbanc, Queensland, Oct. 7. Great lurprlsc nnd dlssattsfaction are in commercial and political drclcs here nt the news that the Drlt. sh war office hns placed large orders or canned meats in the United States. s matter of fact the Queensland cancers anticipating a large demand bad prepared Increased stocks which will now possibly be a drug on their hnnds. llear-Atlmir- nl lKssl Warships for Watson. Wnshlngton, Oct. 7. Wiitsan, in command of the Asiatic ttatlon, with headquarters at Manila, is to be rclnfmccd In Ihc nenr future by the Urocklyn, New' Orleans, Nnsh-rillc- , Albany, lladgcr nnd llaneroft, THE CUP CHALLENGE RACES. ind possibly the Marietta jind Machlas It Is the Intention to completely shut After Thursday Will Sail livery Day ?1T outside supplies from the Filipino ai my. Suudny Excepted, Until Coin. lilctlon of the Scries. The rlalit on Huberts. Washington, Oct. 10. Congressman New York, Oct. 0. By mutual agree-mv-n-t elect itoberts, of Utah, who, ns Is well between the representatives ol Itnow'n, Is n Mormon with throe wives, the New York Yacht club nnd the is preparing for the fight which lie Itiynl Ub.ter Yacht club, the Columbl? seen ahead of him. He has already ie nnd Shamrock will sail every day aftei taincd counsel, nnd the precedents nct Thursday, until the question ol which will likely influence action upon Intcrnntlonnlyachjlngsuprcraacy is cs his opsc nre being carefully gathered tublbhcd. He Sated an American's I.tfe. . Grain Denlers' Association. New York, Oct. 10. A spcelal to the Chicago, Oct. 9. Tho nnnunl meet in." of the Grain Dealers' association Herald from Washington sajs: Toi soldier, life w.ll be held October 18 and 10 nt th saving the OUs of nn Americanfull parhas granted :t G and Pacific hotel. The programmt includes papers on work In Indiana don toDomlngo Mngno.n Filipino prisIcwa, Missouri, Ohio nnd Illinois; oner, who was sentenced by a Spanish short weights nt terminals, clevaton court, In 1637, to pennl servitude foi nrd kindred subjects. The banquet tt six years for robbery. the regular grain dealers will be nl Ilcvcnue Stump Swindle. night the first day. Ofllocrs will bt New York, Oct. 0. Freeman Strait, elected the last day. a business roan, is undci arrest for truffle in washed revenue Dewey Will Visit Atlanta. stamps. Agents of the treasury deWashington, Oct. 8. A delegation ol partment who arrested him say that called on Adrolra Atlanta citizens he heads n gang that has been cleaning Dewey and invited hi into become tht up $2,000 n week, nnd wns $100,000 to ndmlrnl prom guest of that city. The the good when caught. iscd that ho would go to Atlanta al some time not later than Novcmbci Wreck at Ilellevuc, O. 1, the date to bo orranged later. Toledo, O., Oct. 7. A fast train on the New York, Chicago & St. Louis There is another wedding w would road was wrecked nt Ucllcvue. Engl- llL-fn nnnnimen If wo nnlv lind tho Fireman prospective groom's permission, but cer Tracy was badly Injured. and Mall wo don't like to give it vay wjth- - Lynch, Daggageman Harper Clerk tllasgow ore slightly Injured out nuthority. Tim passengers escaped. Dlspatchor Tom Fcnthorstono wont The Power of n Typhoon. in homo the bnck way last evening. okohnmn, Oct. 10. While a tyFrlonds Investigated nnd found tho raging, Saturday, a train reason to bo thnt ho liml beon put olf phoon was from n bridge into the ritct d wns blown tho train, nnd they say it is his near L'tsumomjn. Six persons were olfouso, MUd und many injured, (beat dam was done to nropertv and ciops. Dan M. Evans was elected school aee trusteo Saturday to succeed Aro you n subscribor to Thu Hub? You should bo. MnJ.-Gcwell-know- n n hec-on- The Ceremonies Innnirnrnted hy n Mllltarr anil Civ la rarade A destructive prairie fire occurred Saruuson Accompanied near Salem, 111. Ills I'Iok Captain and Received A rich vein of copper has been found an Ovation. In the Ozarks. Henry W. llchtnc, of Carllnvlllc, 111., Morgantown, W. Vn., Oct. 11. Chad-iiclias been judged insane. Vay was celebrated by 23,000 peoPrivate Watchman Matthias Schlll, of St. Louis, made desperate by tooth- ple. The weather was mignlflcent ache, blew outlds brains. ind country people came from 40 and of St. 50 miles overland. Optician J. Camlllc Duron Louis, nttempted suicide by' tho coThe special with naval onlcers arcaine route becnuse of n reproof for rived at 0 a. m., and a salute in honor drunkenness. f Sampson was flred by Delia Frcndcrgnst's despondency led to shoot herself in the hend nt St. the university cadets. In the party her Capt. Sampson, Louis. She had been suffering from ty- Acre hadvvlck und wife, Lieut. C. C. Marsh phoid fever. The npplc and pear crop In the vi- ind wife, nnd Commander S. . cinity of Ccntralla, 111., Is panning out Staunton. Among the distinguished risltors were Gov. Atkinson, Senntora better than expected. Davis, Two men were indicted nt Fcrry-vlll- Slklns and Scott, Da j ton, Secretary of Mo., on the charge of selling Congressman counterfeit money for future delivery. State Dawson, Gen. Splllman, Gen. Col. Babb and Maj. Elliott. The Transvaal's Btate secretary, Mr. The Procession Started. Reljz, sajs that hope of United States It was nearly noon when the arbitration has not been ndnndoncd. started. Tho parade was Premier Salisbury, In summoning into three grand divisions, comthe British house of lords, announces that "affairs of grave moment" ure to posed of the veterans of the civil and n wars, national bo considered. Henry E. Oclsslcr, n Spanish war (juard of West Virginia and Pennsylrctcran, grew remorseful over break- vania and civil societies. V, The chief marshal was Ilrlg.-Geing the pledge, nt St. Louis, und ended 0. Splllman, of Parkersburg, W. Va. his life with a revolver. Reviewed II r the Guests. John Foncclovv, 21 years old, while Intoxicated, shot Max Ilisch In the leg 'When the procession reached the stand it was reviewed by the and then killed himself nt St. Louis. St. Louis legal tnlcnt has gono to distinguished guests and then disJefferson City in force to both fight missed. The meeting was then called and defend ihc new police law before to order by Hon. G. C. Sturgis nnd Gov. Atkinson presented a magnificent the Missouri supreme court. Gen. Lord Kitchener will lend an ex- (.word to Capt. Chndwick on behalf of pedition of 0,000 Egyptians against the people of tho state. Capt. Chndwick was deeply touched tho khalifa. No English troops will by the ovation accorded hlm.and when be employed. The trial of tho four Spring Volley order was restored accepted the gift In n words. (111.) city officials on the charge of a fevv The Sword of Honor. election fraud is in progress in the circorreThe sword in dimensions cuit court nt Fnnceton. Chicago is becoming dimmed over a sponds with naval regulations. The report to the effect that tho democrat- blade Is of the finest steel, decorated ic national headquarters may bo re- In gold, nnd bears tho following inmoved from that city to cither Wnsh- scription: "Presented to Cnpt. French E. Chndlngton or St. Louis. Mnj. Draincrd, formerly chief com- wick, October 10, 1800. By the citimissary nt Manila, nnd who Is on his zens of West Virginia." On the reverse is a vignette of the way home, Is seriously ill nt Nagacruiser New York, with tho words: saki, Jnpan. "An ideal ship, with an Ideal Gun and The surrounded with a suitnblr Ammunition Co. hns shipped from Enn gland two batteries of mounTha scabbard Is made of sterling sll- tain guns for the American nrmy In rcr, heavily oxydlzcd, nnd relieved by the Philippines. uecorauons. a novo me According to the latest advices from ncLiy-carrc- u Johannesburg, South Africa, tho na- upper band is the coat of arms of the state of West Virginia, with the motto tives, who seem to have been At the tip of the scabbard is a masby the lawless element, nre becoming uncontrollable, nnd annuity Is sive gold dolphin, with ruby eyes. All the metal parts of the belt nre of solid threatened. Charles Aull, warden of rolsom gold nnd sterling silver. A Speech on "Oar Guest." (Cnl.) prifon for 13 jcars, and one of Hon. Joseph Morcland was then Inthe foremost penologist of this country, died, Monday.of kidney complaint, troduced, nnd spoke to the spbjectt in his fiftieth year. Aull was born in "Our guest." He dellevercd n very stirring summary of the navnl victoClay county, Mo., in 1840. SpanUh-Amcrlra- n war, and President Andrnde of Venezuela, ries of the is said, will resign, allowing the accorded to Sampson much of the It peaceful election of Gen. Castro to the credit of the splendid victory ut Sanpresidency. This plan would ovoid a tiago. Sampson replied military dictatorship. son of C. If. thanking the people of Morgantown Ehart, tho hearty Johnson, while nt play, blew the top and of the state for their voice to gave of his sister Illanchc's vvoids of welcome, nnd lively sense of gratitude that he head off, nenr Columbia, Mo., with n the for the reception that had been felt shotgun. him. JJev. Dr. J. II. Garrison, for 2S jenis given Then the Hands Played. of the Christian Evangelist, nt editor At the close of the Gddre&x the asSt. Louis, has presented his resigna- sembled bands played "Amerka" in tion, ns the resut of objections to hla unbon, thousands of voices joining in editorial management. the air. After this an Impromptu re ctptlnn and hnnddiaking wns held, Schley. lasting for an hour. New York, Oct. 7. The naval olilcera will remain here Schley will raise his flag on the cruiser for several days u the guests ol Chicago nt tho Brooklyn navy yard, fi lends In the town. il taking the quarters of Army of the Tennessee. Howisnn. The Chicago will remain ut Chicago, Oct. 11. The twenty-firs- t the navy yard for some time. annual reunion of the Army of thf The Gunhont llnncrnft. Tennessee opened in Memorial hall Oct. 10. Orders have yesterday. The society Is made up ol Washington, Boston navy the commissioned oillccrs of that arm; been telegraphed to the j nrd to expedite the work on the gun- and nearly two hundred of the veterboat Bancroft and she will be placed ans were present when the first meetIn commission without loss of time ing wasj culled yesterday. and sent to tho far cast. Those Gallant Marines. The Tartar Slchtcrt. Washington, Oct. 11. The battalion San Francisco, Oct. It. The trans- of marines who took part in Gen. port Tartar, with tho Kansas volun- Slhwiin's land operations, Sunday, teers on board, wns sighted two miles near Bacoor, was composed of the out last evening. men who so distinguished themselves nl k t, tiler's tocPPH e, tPecjopl stops coughs of all kinds. It does so because it is a great nower. This mikes It the great est prevcntlvoto consumption. n, pro-;essi- ISpanlsh-Americn- n. Put one of Aycr's Cherry Pectoral Plasters oyer your lungs A Library Froc. whoia Madfcal For four ernti In iumji tapsxeeit-sue- , vo will send you ttxtetn msdlc&I bvokj. Ws Iists ths exctntlT isrtteet of loins or ths won eminent phrttcUns In the United sutet. Unasnsl opportunities snit long experience eml. nentlr nt them for siring you medlcslWrits sdrlae. ..am ... freelj sfl ths psrtle. u v nil win rBrai.H b n Mm without coit, ssm -pn. c, W Medleal Advlco Frm. .,. W 1- """"aS,,;, aver. j, Lowell, suss. Wi wcll-chosc- - s--' METHODIST Arc PREACHERS Com- Sent to Work for the ing Year. It REV. II. WHEAT COMES BACK UEHE Maxim-Nordenfel- dt cap-tnln- six-gu- Presiding Elder deo. 11. Hayes Returned to Henderson District.' --- Bear-Admir- al Itrnr-Admlr- at Fear-Admlr- nl Kear-Admln- Tho Lonlsvlllo Conference of tht) Mothodist Episcopal Church, South, closed Tuesday and tho minister) hnvo gono to their homes, old and now, for tho work of tho coining year. Ilov. Uoo. II. Hayes has been returned as presiding oldor of the Henderson District, and Rev. Itoscoe M. Wheat is again assigned to the Karllugton and Nebo circuit. Tlioso facts nre n source of pleasure to the pooplo of Karllugton especially, who liavo in tiiolr hearts a warm place for tho venernbio Elder and had petitioned so earnestly for tho return of the young pastor. Among otlior changes that word mndo by Conforenco aro somo that aro of ospecial interest to our read-or- o becnuso of friendship nnd lovo for theso men of God who have la bored lovingly nmong us in tho past. Rov. S. H. Lovelaco goes from Mndisonvlllo to River's Memorial and Renchmont churches, Louis-vlllRov. W. C. Hayes from Greenville to Cadiz; Rov. T. O. Peters, from Eliznbotlitowu to Greenville; Rov. J. T. Cherry, from Franklin to Trenton ; Rov. W. H. Archio, from Tho now Dawson to Audubon. pnstor nt Madlsonvlllo Is G. W. Lyon. Following is a complete list of apnoiutinouta for tho Henderson, Princeton and Russellvillo districts: IIEXDEHSON DISTllirr. Presiding Eldor G. II. Hayes. Henderson F. M. Thomas. Audubon W. II. Arclioy Corydon F. H. Davis. o; White HcalnientN All rilled. 1'IUNOETON DISTltlOT. Washington, Oct. 11. Ten of the New York. Oct. B 11. Presiding Eldor J. W. Bingham. CATTLn-Natl- vo Steers ... 4 25 CI SO Frincoton IV4W COfTON-Mlddl- lng "7i...... 'tt twelve volunteer regiments last called Marion T. S. L. C. Coward, 3 80 J. Randolph. out have recruited their full quota ol KLOUlt Winter Wheat.... 3 CO No 2 Red 76ft men, nnd will be Immediately prepared WW Toltis B. A. Cundilf. WHEAT Hi Z COKN-N- o. tl'f for transportation to the Philippines Shady Grovo G. W. Pangburn.g .... M M 2 OATS-N- o. Salom To bo supplied, , 9 23 U 0 75 1'OItIC Now Mess These embrace nil the white regiment! Carrsvillo E. IS. Gibbons. ST. LOUIS. last authorized. COTTON-MlddT'.i Smltblnnd R. T. McConnoll. IK) i( C 60 UliUV Grand Rivers E. D. Bogges. Condition of the Cotton Crap. Cows nnd Heifers. Z SO O 4 00 6 15 4W Eddyvlllo u. M. Russoll. CALVES (per 100) Washington, Oct. 11. The condition t 25 (0 i 70 to Choice HOOS Kultawa Itobert Johnson. HHUKI'-I'-- nlr to Choice.... 3 00 Q 3 90 of cotton on October 10, Is C2.4, nj Cadiz W. C. Hayes. 3 55 nt 3 7U t'l.OUK l'utents inew) ... Z W W 3 60 somparcd with C8.S last month; 73.4 on Cerulean Springs L. W. Browder. Other Grades WHEAT No. 2 Hed Winter 72 ip li'A October 1, 1898; 70.0 at the correspondCanton J. W. Crowo. f',lTtNVn. 2 il 3J ing date in 1807, and 73.5 the mean foi J. II. Galloway. Star Llino-WorVS OATS-N-o. I il Grcenvillo T. O. Poters. .... U UJ October average for the last ten j raw HY1S UO Z 3 W it 8 60 HU'ACCO Lugs Groonvillo Circuit R. C. Love. Leaf Hurley.... i 50 M 12 00 The 'Wheat Crop of 1800. Dawson To bo supplied. 11 50 HAY Clear Tloiothy tnev 0 00 New York, Oct 10. The total wheat 20 Lamnsco Ciruit To bo Supplied. IS & HtfTTEll Cholco Hairy.... . EJOS-rre- sh II 0 Sim crop of 1899 is estimated by the AmerEditor Central Methodist J. W. .... it , UACON-Cl- eur Ulb M ican Agriculturist in its flnal report Lewis. if Q tU at 503,350,000 bushels, grown on L.AHH rrlmo Steam HUSSEIiIVII.LE DISTHIOT. CHIU.iUU. Presiding Eldor W. C. Brandon. acres. riATTI.Ii-Nati- ve Hteers.... i 75 St 7 00 KuBsolIvillo C. R. Crowo. UOaS-Pa- lr to C'holci...... 4 "5 y Wi ftalelded bjr Shootlnjr. Adnlrvlllo J. A. Lowis. Patents... 3 65 M 3 65 M. Brady, New York, Oct. 11. r. Allonsvillo D. S. Bowles. Bprlng l'atenta... 3 40 tt 3 70 71 z Bprlne 71H head of the firm of F. M. Brady & Vo , Elkton-- O. Y. Smith. WHEAT-N- o. PiO. 2 JICU tii dealers in stocks nnd bonds, commitI'ftlP Elkton Circuit J. W. Lovo. Sharon Grovo R. C. Aloxander. 23 iVXM ted suicide in ids private offico ycstei OATS No. 2 7 5 if 7 80 KoilsmnuRvlllo J. A. Chandler. Mess (new) I'OHIv day by shooting. KANSAS CUT. Trenton J. T. Cherry. CATTLE Native Steers.... 4 75 Q 6 2J Hopkinsvillo W. K. Piuor. 4 20 O 1 65 IIUQS All Grades Wedding: Announcement. 6S Q Crofton J. S. Miteitoll. WHEAT No. 2 lied 23 tt 24 2 White oath-N- o. Lafnyotto J. E. King. Mr. Mnurico Colbert nnd COHN-N- o. 2................. 2D it 234 Stella Saunders will be mcrrled Miss Auburn Jns. P. Chandler. next 3 60 O 4 00 FI.OUR High Grade Wednesday, October 18th, nt the Hopkinsvillo Circuit P.O. Duvall. 42 W COHN-N- o. i Lowlsburg J.B. Adams. OATS Western it 31 Cntliolie Church. Palrvlow Circuit A. E. Barrett. 1(60 if 15 61 lce pruilt-Stand- ard 0 60 tt 3 75 Mess Logan R. Uag US-St- eers ks HAY-Cho- THE MARKETS. at Calmanera, Cuba. Morganflold J. W. Einorson. Morganflold Circuit R. P. Orr. Madlsonvlllo G.W. Lyon. Enrllngtou nnd Nebo, It. M. Wheat. Hanson G. M. Everett. Slnugbtorsvillo E. E. Fate. Sncrnmonto O. D. Wnrd. Sobroo City W. A. Enslcy. Dixon II. A.Brandon. Cnsoyvillo Sllns Nowton. Smith's Miil- -J. It. McAfee. Robauls W.R. Smith. UACON-Sh- ort COTTON-Mlddll- nfr 1Mb Side W WHEAT-N- O. COHN-N- o. 2 2 LOUISVILLE. 2 Hod CTi 73 6 7 Mixed OA'IB No. 1'OltIC New Mess HACON-Cl- ear Ulbs COITON-Mlddll- nff 25 0 60 . 35 Q it it 7; 3C',. KVi 0 75 i year. Subscribe for Thk Will cure a Cough or Cold at once. Slaco Tuesday evening, Oct. 10, 181W. tho oldest child of this little Hum, t1 per It positively relieves all throat troubles. family, a dear little girl beloved by - 35 cents at druggists, Small dosee. Priceneighbors and friends. 1 CW tt lf Dr.BulTs COUCH SYRUP North II. Hartford. Died. Pearl, aged about 7 years, the swoot little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Bourlnud nt their home iu this , v. tj'i 3i -- ' v light and work for fairness and 44 Actions honesty in elections and tho righteous administration of public affairs. Tho time has come when men and not mere poliThe fragrance of life is ticians should take a leading CAUL M. MOORB, Editor and Manager. ntfrt in these things for the eood vigor and strength, neither of of tho State. which can be found in a perSEE PUBLISHING COMPANY.? ct Incorporated Oxlv about three weeks of the re son whose blood is impure, bntered tbe PcttolBee at Enliucton at Stcood markable campaign of 1899 remain i ait matter, and so far as Ilonkins county Is con and whose every breath cerned there is no mistaking tho fav speaks of internal troubles. orablo turn of public sentiment with SUBSCKIPTION RATES reference to tne.uemocrRiiciicKei. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies, Hustler. Can this bo meant? Which vitalizes and enriches the It oo Oil Year, urlcilr In advanced " Sli.Monlln, " Democratic ticket? It must be blood, gives a good appetite ' J "IhreeMonthi, " Single Coplea.... that the writer had in mind and and makes the weak strong. Specimen coplet mailed tree on application. Oorrespondtnia wanted In all pant ol tha meant to say the Republican husbandtvas run Run Down onntT. Addretauatorpatticulara ticket there's only one of these down in health and alt tired out. Those v i and it's a winner and tho above excellent medicines, Hood's Pills andSarsa-pariltis a typographical error. It reads OCTOBER 12, 1899. THURSDAY. built him tip again." Mrs. It, L. .. like one. i Mowrv. T&wanda, Pa. of theJust Smell Sweet" &" S . a, REPUBLICAN TICKET. For Governor, W. S. TAYLOK, Of Butler County. For Lieutenant-GovernoJOHN MAIISIIAL.L,. r, i CALEB l'OWERS, Of Knox County. For Attorney-GeneraCLIFTON J. PRATT, Of Hopkins County. For Auditor, Rev. JOHN S. SWEENEY, l, Of Louisville. For Secretary of Stnto, Of Bourbon County. For Treasurer, WALTER It. DAY, Of Breathitt County. For Superintendent of Public In- Btruction, , 1 JOHN BURKE, Of Campbell County. 4g For Commissioner of Agriculture, OArTTJ. W. THROCKMORTON, Of Fayetto County. I For Representative. I BEN T. ROBINSON. f IAnnkxation 1ms been good for What's tho matter Hawaii. with it for tho Philippines? Src pages this week and full of matter of vital importance politically and wo trust other items of items of interest and worth. Head and pass to your neighbor. nafimntn of tlm mil. road man, as expressed in his charter ol cities oi tno secomi flm-iivr'- nlnca is lint, innlfilio- - liilll !1I1V friends among the honest, sturdy and intelligent railroad men of the State. A . "Gacii" party with a State organization and State ticket is on- iirtral to Iinvn one filinllonirer mill inspector at each voting precinct 111 me oiuie, miu uiiuii jinny slinild see that they have theso challengers. QovKHNon Editou W. L. Pmujrs, of tho Greenville Banner, has put tho John Young Brown ticket at tho II. ... Il .. head of his editorial columns, II..JI. IIIHUI.IIIBI III...1.A . l.vll.llni. Bl.il lltn. and is fighting Goebol. Ho ex uplr calhartle to tak with n"oo3' Hanapartllat plains that he is fighting for do what he has all tho time believed God!. mv countrymen,Lou you , i to bo right and puts an e.ditorial want a liar ilor uovurnorf sprag in tho wheel of kickers No Railroad Commissioner. thus : Every Goebellte subscribe? of this Tho change of plan in reference paper, who objects to its course this to rdilrojd commissioner for this woek will please step up to tho counter and liavo his name taken oil district as decided by tho State the delinquent list before he kicks Central Committee has killed a for the Chinaman's motto Is ours: powerful good announcement in "No payee no klekeo." The Bkk of Dick Salmon's candi Wo had dacy for that pflice. Hon been sprouting good And now its Bronston, tunics tosav Chas. J. Bronston, who will not about Dick since wo received his speak for tho Goqbel ticket, will letter containing tho announce, not support the Goebel ticket, ment and Senator Deboe's official and in a letter demands in pow- call iu the same mail. But the erful alul direct terms tho with- State Central Committee says drawal of Goebel's name from ll.ir. JJ .till. Till? "Rw rncnrvno llin B.W ..UN. ilJ. oiwl Ail.. tho ticket. Ho says "all good things it had to say against party pride and per- a time when Dick will bo chosen sonal honor demand that Mr. by his constituents to one of Goebel's name should, by party many places of trust and honor organization, bo stricken from for which ho is well equipped. uie ncKCD anu u loyui, uprignt, It is a matter of regret that a honest democrat and true man blunder should bo made by which be put in his place." a cood man bo put in the posi tion of announcing for an oflico And the Chicago ward poli from which he must later withticians are coming Jo tell Ken- draw his candidacy. Tho w isest tucky Democrats how to vote. politicians sometimes mako er whipcracker rors, but such an error as this is What a sort of a campaign the Goobel unfortunate, occurring, as is an leaders arc making it. Are Ken- - nounced iu tho Louisville Comtuckians to learn duty from fly mercial, because of lack of ing theatrical posiilgs of tho "boy knowledge of how the members orator" from .Nebraska, or the or tho committeo In authority nantomimic annearances. of Chi stood upon tho question when cago ward politicians in silk the call was mado on Bhort notice hats, kid gloves and long tailed for county and district convencoats? Do the Goebel managers tions. It is probablo and to be think Kentuckians so lacking in hoped that another time a poll of strength of character and knowl- committees will be taken before edge of their duty in this serious and not after call and announceduty of suffrage that they will bo ment. carried away by such eaten penny performance? IIUUU 1.1 nm,-in- Zwocfo SatiapM . svlvania had last been seen with tho cars. Tho Pennsylvania sont back .Word that tho cars had arrived at Chicago "O. K." and had been started west in tlio best leased of spirits and awfully with tho scenery en route. It is tho custom to scud new freight cars out of tha works tit Jefi'ersonvillo in care of various railroads, and loaded with freight to lessen the charges for handling them. It seems that tho Pennsylvania had mado an arrangement to handle the 1,000 now Denver & Rio Grande cars under a plan of this kind. After leaving Chicago, it is 'believed, various division superintendents and others scattered hero and there without knowledge of tho fact that tho cars were intended for prompt delivery to tho Denver & Rio Qiande, and put them into service of ono kind or another. The Pennsylvania is said to have quite a shortage of freight cars this fall, anyhow, owing to big crops in tho west. But tho Denver & Rio Grando needs tho care, too, or it would not have ordered them, and tho Ohio Palls work well, it needs tho money. A tracer has been sent out after the stray 1.000 cars. He has located a few of them out west. Ho will go from Seattle to Santa Fe, N. M., and from Kansas City to California, till he finds every one of tho new cars. Somo of them will need :i fresh coat of paint by tho time he locates them. Louisville Commercial. POWERFUL LETTER. pies embodied in your raco im possible. "1 will not indulgo the of oven suggesting to you and your associates that all party pride and personal honor demand that Mr. Goebel's name should, by tho party organization, bo stricken from tho ticket and a loyal upright, honest Democrat and true man bo put in his place. Upon your conscience and judgment that responsibility must rest. Yet if you, as the recognized leader of Democracy in the State and tho Hon. W.J. Bryan as the leader thereof in the nation, to both of whom, and especially to you, my loyalty is attested by withdevotion nnd out limit, still insist tho Demoshall becomo cratic party particeps criminis to such perfidy I, as a humble member thereof, cannot consent by indorsing such indisputable treachery and dishonesty, although still intending to maintain loyally and faithfully the best intererts of that party, and strive to insuro its future success. Very truly yours, pro-sumpti- on self-respesolf-sacrifi- Doctors"Say; Bilious and IntcrmittentFevers which prevail in'miasmaticUls-trict- s are invariably, accompanied by derangements of the Stomach Ljver and Bowels. CLOTHING. Tho bulk of our Pull mid Winter Clothing is on our counters now, and we nro ready for business. In fact tho early cool weather has caused our customers to rush in upon us before we aro ablo to "spread" oursolvcs over our now room us wo intended. We hoped to have had all things arranged nicely iu plenty of time for early Fall Trade, but our "boss," i. e., tho people say nay; Uioy wpnt to buy NOW, so wo havo pulled oil' our coat, rolled up oilr sleevosj and nro now "in it" and "at it" with "both foot" and "both hands," for all it is worth. Como riglij. nlong, Wo aro at your ladies and gentlemen. wo nro awfully anxious for you lo koop us hard at work. Our Clothing, Wraps, Dress Goods nnd Shoes aro now open to. you, and wo must say wo nre porffictly satisfled'with each. Wo never had a purchase wo were as proud of. Homo iu and partake. Tho values aro good, tho styles are lipid and tho prices bottom. coin-ninnd; 5AftftjJ !J The Secret of Health. The liver is the great "driving wheel" in the mechanism of J man, and when it is out oforder, the whole system becomes deranged and disease is the result. l " X ft & Tutt's Liver Pills Cure all Liver Troubles. M. K. Services first and third Sun days nt 11 a. m. nnd nt 7:30 p. in. Prayer. meotlngWcdiiesday evonlug. pnstor. Sunday-schoo- l Church Directory. Churok. W. O. Wilson, at 0:30. o Christian Ciiukoii. I. H. Teel, pnstor. Sorvices second and fourth Sundays at 11 n. in. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday-schoat 0:30. Prayer meet ol It is not unlikely that the prominent Democrats will desert the Goebel banner on account of this expose of Goebel. Henry Koehler & Company of Cuoioi: Want several Walnut Loos. Will pay hiKhost car-loa- "O.J. Bronston." cash nrico. They also buy Poi'i.AK and IlAimwoon LuiinEK in mixed cars. Write them at Louisville, Ky. DOWN IN THE MINES. or-ti- er lug, Wednesday evenings at 7:30. M. K. Ciiuium, South. R. M. Wheat pastor. Services first and Third Sundays at 11 a. in. and 7:30 at 0:30. Prayer p. m. Sunday-schomeeting, Tuesday evenings at 7:30 o'clock. Missionakv Haitist CiiUKait. I). 8. Edwards Pastor. Services second Saturday night, Sunday and Sunday niirht. Suudav'sclioolat0:30. Prayer meeting, Monday evenings at 7::joo'ciock. Cathomo Churok. Rev. A. M Coenen, pastor. First Mass, Sunday mornlnir at 7 o'clock: Second Mass, 9:30 o'clock. Afternoon service nt 2:30 every Sunday. ol RTRHnPrVrtri ' r r MADIBONVILLE. KY. YOUFt MONEY BACK Tp YOU WANT IT. I?ir?$$$$r4 & N. B, Miss Sallie Browning has juat returned from the West, and has riven our Dress Goods, Trimmings and General Dry Goods Stocks their JJ finishing touch. & fc pH flpw5B1S!"9E J JWIJU! Jl MWP J" Belf-respe- X.H Secretary Atkinson lms on his book, ordors for two hundred lion. Charles J. Bronston Deand fifty cars coal. nounces Ooebd Weigher John Hofran at tlio Hecla mine, lias for the last two weeks DEAi'ANDS 1115 WITHDRAWAL. been a sulfercr from bronchial trou ble, but is still able to'work. Foreman Summers, of Speaks of Perfidy, Indisputnblc works, says the demand the coke fur coke now exceeds the supply and that the Treachery and Dishonesty. production of many additional coko ovens could easily be disposed of, Tho followiug letter has been during the tlio present prosperous tunes. addressed this week to Foreman Day, llocla mines, J. O. S. Blackburn, chairman of says much work of thomony will bo nnd the Goebol Democrat ic State cam- required to put tho inliiunm! machin paign Committee by Senator O. ery In good shape and under J. Bronston, of Lexington. It is progressingtlio work of Improving: , rajiuuy. sufliciontly warm and lucid to ex For the first time in quite a while, plain itself: tlio Kmplro miners took n fow days J. O. S. Blackburn, Chairman rest last Saturday, nnd almost In n Dear Sir : I take tho liberty of body attended tlio street fair nt addressing you as tho chairman Hopkinsville. So hard have they of tho Democratic campaign com- worked for tlio last year or two, thatd that n day oil was highly mittee and tho recognized leader by them. of Kentucky Democracy. Upon A large number of miners from my return from Europe, I received Mortons nnd llarnsley attonded the a letter from your committeo Republican speaking horo on the asking me to speak on behalf of night of tho Ith, nnd went nway with the Judge the Democratic ticket headed by highly pleased Gochelnnd way Goebel Holt pounded the tho Hon. William Goebel. To Election Law. Miners as n general that letter I mado prompt re- tiling, nro in fnvur of justlco iu nil sponse, avowing my intentions of matters. voting for Mr. Goebel and the A voto for Goebel menus n voto entire ticket and expressing my against tho fast increasing industries to willingness to speak at any time of our stale, nnd is an invitation the capitalists to remain nwny from or place your committee might State. Miners, like nil other laborconsider an advantage to tho ers aro equally interested in tiro upcause of Democracy, granting, building of our labor producers and oto ngnlnst tlio man who however, tho rigjit to speak should to, or favors an attack attempts on frankly and consistently, upon same. certain measures incorporated If tho editors of tho U. M. W. in tho party platform, and es- Journal knew the past record of the pecially assuring tho committee nian.w ho last week, signed "Smith," of niyreadiness at all times to do thoy would hnrdly give space to his As many of our woll anything to aid the success of the letter. Smith for severnl renders lived know, selected by tho Demo- here nnd nt Hecln,nud If years discandidates ho over cratic party, not violative of played any ambition to mako an nor inconsistent w ith per- honest nnd independent living, such was not the ense hero. Ono who sonal honor. knows, says that-fabout two "Your committee has made no" years ho lived iu ono of tho St. Berreply to that letter, and I must, nard houses, without paying n cent therefore, assume that it is of rent, nnd nlso tlirouglijiiu own in became n subject of still reserving tho right to accept dolent habits, J. It. Atkinson whom charity. Mr. or reject my offer at its pleasure. Smith tried to malign in the article "I have just read the letter of die wrote, donated n sum of money Mr. Goebel to Mn. Carlisle of date to mm anu in oiner ways oeinenueu now of May 2U, 181)0, and, knowing Smith, yet tho iugrnto ho is, wnys by falsehoods nnd other mo as you do, it is scarcely nec- tries to unmage, upossioio, tne goou name essary for mo that I can- of Mr. Atkinson, who is known far not now speak for Mr. Goebel on and near as tho truo friend of the any conditions. To do so would minor. king ever sat upon n thrown No be a gross violation of all who commanded inoro resneot and and a sacrifice of all per- love, of those around him than lie sonal horior, and, in my humble does. When Smllli talks of fatso he knows judgment, disloyal to the best weights, about, and not what he is talking of the Democratic party are tnat iio lias neverthe indications interests iully recovered Recalling, as I do, tho memora- from the eilects of that good Hogble contest'in the general assem- ging ho got while prowling around business. While bly of Kentucky, in tho spring of whore he had no he was known hero in Farlington as 1890, and especially tho treachery a chronic grumbler, undeserving or to you and through you, tho party tho respect of his fellow man and which had chosen you as its can- unworthy of trust or confidence. didate of Mr. Carlisle and his Tho following clipping shows what followers, I am simply horrified eliect tlio waivo or prosperity has on at being forced to know that Mr. tnocoaiHtippiyin tno west: "Bituminous coal Is in Goebel, with whom I was so in- niand nil through tho slronir do Western timately and constantly asso- Htates, nnd current Inquiry Is much greater than tho supply. While this ciated, was. then harboring the is applicabl to all kinds of soft coal, intent, immediately upon the ad- It is particularly so Eastern journment of the legislature, and varieties. Ohio nnd to tlio Virginia West the causo for which we were so coals nre very short, running well desperately fighting, waB still Into thousands of ears, with little hope ofany held in tho balance, to at once Tho same relief in tho near future Illrush into tho arms of his bitterest inois coal,applies to Indiana and a though probably in foe and unite with him iu mak- lesser degree because tho car servico ing your success and tho princi- - is more closely looked Into. Tho practlcnl settlement of tho Now River strlko In West Virginia, will ..3 fn.l&rV?t relievo tlio situation to somo extent, but tho tension Is strong nnd tho de mand lor coal growing nioro brisk very dny. As stntod Inst woek so great lias hecouid tho scarcity of coal m Kansas, tnat confiscation by railroads Is n common, everyday occurrence. There Is practically no 2 stock of coal at any of tho Important k need not lose flesh in summer !J centers of trade and manufacture In tho West, J if you use the proper means netlvityjn which Is duo to tho groat nil Industrial lines, 5 to prevent it. You think nre calling for increased shipyou can't take SCOWS ? ments on their contracts, which, of EMULSION in hot weather, J course, reduces tho amount avail ablo for commercial purposes, A lnrgo tounago of coal J but you can take it and di- - $ very north nnd northwest on Is being nccount 3 gest it as well in summer as sent posltho shortago on docks at of tlio western shore of Lake' j on tlio in winter. It is not like the dichigau. It Is clearly ovident that r c piain on, wnicn is tnern is going to oe grontutmcuity in difficult to take at any time. supplying tlio demand for soft coal n If f ii you arc losing uesn, jc tills season. 9 Coko continues nctlvo and prices you are losing ground and 5 strong." you need I'rehidont MeKInloy Mas greeted by enthusiastic thousands nt Gales-buror Gknkkai. Haitist Chuhoh. William Chlldra, pastor. Bcrvicos every third Sunday nt 11 o'clock a. m. and nt 7:30 p. in. Y. P. S. C E. Prayer meeting every Sunday evening at 0:30. An Eastern svndicato has pur- chased the electrio railways of Iron- ton, u.: untiettsDutv anu Asiiiauti, Ky.: Central City and Huntington, W. Va. Connecting links will bo made which will irlvo n continuous street car service along tho Ohio river for a distance or iorty miles. MfH nA uan and Aar of Dr. by tb Eir(tcUr,btallby condition Powder. Thta yoa Urtt will b Ire from malaria, typhoid ftrcr, coMi ud tb trip. Dr. CarlttnU'a Grma LUer mj. 1'owaeris ib dch mcaiciaoisoaay V, YOUR ORDERS SOLICITED Who Dois the Lfterr&istass? yryyT yi rw aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaHRaBv JsUSk aHaaHBHaViSnBlaaBaHBaiBahjBaSaaalBVal Ask your neighbors. They all Bay that wo haul belter loads, furnish best teams, and always at thorightprice. r nin irfri All - n "-- tn tn . sido-sho- ttin.M A TIMELY HINT: m mam Barnett & Arnold. JSintwfti blood lu Md lht roar Dat ! U a whola ATtUU f - - fi n - -"- at. ill i 4 rituJ j-i fHatatft IkJ - " --- For your Cold try Dr. Otto's SpruM Gum Balsam. Prlea 2 So and 60s For sal by M. McCORD, appro-elate- GOVERNOR BRADLEY railroad Can any ON THE STUMP. Buadlky will prob man, from general manager and ably make his speeches for the superintendent down, vote for Republican ticket immediately Mr. Goel)el, who has labeled them after Bryan has made his tour all as dishonest and unworthy of Man Who First Led Kentucky of tho State, in which event trust by the terms or his charter Republicans to Victory both (JooLel and Bryan will hear of cities of the second class? He of tho Governor's oratory and has in that instrument disquali WILL ADVOCATE HEI'UIILICAN TIIKET. fied them frqm the full rights of logic of facts. citizenship m this free commonNo Republican will forget how wealth and cast upon them a slur His Veto of Goebel Bill Foundato vote the ticket this year. It of dishonor that tan only bo tion of the Great Fight Avas never easier nor more of a wiped out by Goebel'sretiremeut Against It. pleasure. One jab of tho stencil, from public life. Can any man cast a vote for ono who thus at n mark under the Log Cabin, and Governor William O. Bradley, Goebel is defeated. But you pleasure and with a stroke of a must do your own voting. Don't pen sweeps away tho rights of the man who first led Kentucky freemen. What would ho not do Republicans to victory, bore the leave it to somebody else. if clothed with the power of Gov brunt of tho battle in tho heat of the day and was seated in the Tiik Goebelites are on the rear ernor! Governor's chair, where he has platform of tho campaign and Tiik following little table most ably and fearlessly perwill make a whipping journey would seem to refute Mr. Bryan's formed the duties of that responthrough Kentucky with Bryan as chief lash and cracker in the en- prediction that without no free sible office, has announced that in- ho will take tho stump for the deavor to "get 'em in line." May-b- o coinage there could bo in the Republican State ticket. crease in circulation its's better to be on tho rear country. With an increase of There is harmony and victory platform than not to bo on at all. $1.23 since July 1, 1890, a few in the air throughout tho RepubThe Hopkinsville Kentuckian days prior to Mr. Bryan's nomi- lican ranks. The Goebel papers have persistently predicted that calls Hon. John W. Yerkes a nation, for each one of the peoplo in tho United the Governor would not bo heard "partisan," but admits that ho is a "really able and scholarly states, it can no seen mat jur, iu this campaign and upon this man" and "a gentleman of brains Bryan's prophesy was a few dol- prediction thoy based their conclusion that there was a lack of and education." It is good to lars out of the way. Per canita enthusiasm and harmony iu tho know and a great concession that circulation iu Republican party. tho Kentuckian has found one Date. United States Governor Bradley has "in his in the Republican July 1, 1890. gentleman . $21.28 23.08 own way and with his unique in. party. January 23.42 dividual strength been in tho con January 1. 1898 25.19 test for pure elections and for Coni'usion is in tho houso of January 1, 1899. 25.38 Gov- Julyl.1899 1, 1899 ilioso who predicted that 2542 the preservation of tho right of September sullrago lrom tho beginning." ernor Bradley would be silent The through tho campaign. Onb of the laughable incon remarks tho Commercial. "The Governor furnished tho basis for sistencies of tho Democratic cam Republican argument everywhere the fight against Goebelisni in paign in Kentucky is found in for tho overthrow of Goebelisni his famous veto of the election the first section of the platform is based upon Gov. Bradley's bils and ho now announces he adopted by the Louisville Music powerful veto of tho Goebel elecwill go on tho stump for tho Hall convention. It reads: "The tion law, and in elfect the Govticket. Democrats of Kentucky, in con ernor began the campaign which is being prosecuted now, when volition assembled, The rear platform form of en- without tho slightest nualifica- - he stood between the peoplo and thusiasm is to bo tried again in tiou, the principles and policies a corrupt Democratic legislature, Kentucky. Bryanites seem not na with William Goobel at tho head satislied with the previous com- declared in the .Democratic Chi- of it, and exhausted the measure tional Platform adopted at plete demonstration of its in bi- of executive power to defeat its cling to tho rear platform cago iu 1890. js Their faith metallism vindicated by infamous piirposest" vof tho campaign with the same events." desperation that they continue Wo all remember that the 1,000 FREIGHT CARS STRANG. to clutch tho 10 to 1 theory. They country was to go to the "domni-tio- n must hold to something. borrows" if it didn't accept They Are Brand New and are GoEBKi, says in effect, in the Chicago platform yith its Mn. Running at Large. can his charter of cities of tho second policy of free silver and its lrom didate of tree speeches class, that no railroad man is fit rear platforms. LOST Ono Thousand Freight to bo trusted in tho legislature cars ; brand new. and not oven bo allowed to hold Mk.Gokijki, has again been cor- They aro lost good and proper. so low an oflico as common says the nereu. lie ioiu uungs mat uiu Several weeks ago thoy left the Mr. Goebel Works, at tailroad man shall not bo eligible not jibo with byfacts as asserted Ohio Falls Carand newlypainted, clean Mr. John G. to hold such ollice. It is tho brand incidentally Then tho press and and with tho name of tho Denver of dishonor ho puts upon thorn, Carlisle. d tho people pushed linn so hard & Rio Grando gracefully and they will remember him on each. The Ohio Falls for a substantiation of his posiNovember. in tion that ho in desperation called Oar works a fow days ago sent a Judgk WaIiTKB Kvans' fearless Mr. Carlisle, in effect and almost draft to tho Denver headquarters utterances on tlio crimes of vio- in words, a liar. And now Mr off tho purchasing railroad, inlating the election laws of the Goobel stands convicted of false- tending to collect for the cars, United States and tho punish- hood by tho publication of his supposing that by this time thoy up" ment that is sure to follow, is own letter iu his own handwrit- had been delivered "this endHowliialuug thoso fellows think ing to Mr, Carlisle, whicji letter and "handle with care." twice who had 'concluded to do substantiates iu every particular ever, the word canio back that 111., whero on tho campus of as they pleased under the Goebel tho statements of Mr. Carlisle. until tho cars arrived there would historic Knox College ho delivered n election law so that they gained Tho latter had no desiro to Bay bo no payment inado, "as per stirring address. Violations will be anything in tho Kentucky fight, contract." a point. Tho wires immediately became and must have it to keep up 5 , looked after and prosecuted, and but has been forced to do because It is estimated that tlio Southern United States laws are very vig of statements made by Mr. Goe,-b- hot out of JcU'ersonviflo. Tho 2 your flesh and strength. If f planters will receive between 75. brought- in question Mr. car works sent messago after mes that 10o,000,000 moro for 000,000 orous. nnd mif l:iu Nfri inlfinrf ii- anrl Carlisle's voracity. And this sage shooting over tho wires to ., U Jnnl Ml (a Z tueir cotton tins year man last sen Evkhy earnest citizen of tiro paragon of cold intellectuality ask where in tho blazes and otlior 'X JUJJVI lllj Ull II, UUII I IUII IU V son. man is con- places those thousand cars wore continue until you arc thor--1 commonwealth, every preacher; tlil8,',aint-no-fool- " Tlio Hawthorno Sisters at tho MaC sonic Hall tlio remaining throe oughly strong and well. teacher, piofessional man, every victed of falsehood by his own "at." Inquiries wore especially pointed at tho Chicago headconscientious, Christian lips, by his own hand. . anJfi oo, llilru2bM. nights or tins week'. honest, Tiiis brings again to mind tho quarters of the Pennsylvania S SCOTT St DOWUr, nirmUls, New York. ma n should put their nanus in f Subscribe for Tub IIke. tho present Kentucky political exclamation of Mr. Sweeney, "My Railroad company. The Penn- -self-respe- Contractor and Builder St. Bernard Drug Store. is viaii txPamiNca An cpinenilc of typhoid fever has broken out nt the lllblo College, LexEARLINETON, KY. ington, nmong the students. Thoro aro nine cases. Tho uso of water In All classes of bulldinirs erected and nn old cistern is believed to havo mado coinpleto ready for occupancy, llLIag caused the disease. am irrtmnmimmmmmmnmriM Including thoTurnlshiuirof all mater- - L , r tr. i i" i.i. 2 huh, iiieuiutiiiciii mm ciiiniiiuii utuor. For all fresh cuts or weunds In either tlio human subjects or iu aui PLANS. DETAILS. 8PECI- Iifn rnncnnnhlA ntul cntlnfunHiiM If mais, as a dressing, Ballard's Snow 3 FICATIONS a CONTRACTS given I Liniment isoxcelleut; while for gores I DRAWN UP ON SHORT NO- - gunrnntPid. Jstlmatcs cheerfully work. I on nil kliuls'bulldlng and special on working horses, especially If slow tllvo me a chance at your work. y to heal, or suppurating, Its healing 1 TIOE. qualities aro uncqUaled. 25 and W)o. St. llornard Drugstore. Ii. lilalock & Sous of Mayfleld, have made tho largest privnto sale of tobacco over made in Western They sold tho Italian contractor 530 hogsheads of leaf which averaged about $7X0 per (Succetior to Itaic Datii ) hundred. The salo Involves $7o,00o. a Bottl. U '? n r -- 1 Ken-tuck- y. nt GEORGE O. TQY, ct Aide Phlftr, Onward, Tana., wilitt: I btrt known Dr U, A Simmon Liver MtJlcIn7 jeiri. II It a food madlclne II caret Crampt la Siomacb, aad Torpid LNtr, I balitra it It a much beder mdlcln ibio Ztllln'and Click Draneht. LIVERY & FEED At the Old Bland, on Main street, just STABLE. vest of Depot. EAKLINGTON, KY. First-Class or The contract has been let for the construction of tho Ohio & Kentucky railroad, to extend from Jackson, In Ilrenthltt county, through Wolfe county, into the rich conl and timber lands of Eastern Kentucky, n (list mice of 20 miles. to express my thanks to tho manufacturers of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, for having put on tho market such a woudorfel medicine," says W. W. Masslngill, of Beaumont, Texas. There aro many thousands of moth ors whoso children have been saved from attacks of dysentery and chol-er- a infantum who must also feel by St. Berthankful. It nard Drugstore, Earlingtou; Ben T. Robinson, Mortons Clap; Georgo Equipment and PromptService. i ht "I wish lo-sa- 00 tVYMmircB self-respe- ct ... aflH.rlnRraKtHaiatHuHK a i King, St. Charles. - While Carl Eleo was loading his household goods on after miumgiit, to move nwny irom uiay county. Mrs. Eleo was shot from ambush and seriously wounded. ltlflaOa JaBcpaHSJB -- 'lffiSStfflaBIWfifc. .WBwiitfPTPwTSM.MiFTiaM - It Saved Her Life. Miss Mninio Smith, Mlddlesboro, Ky., writes: My littlo sister had the Croup very bad. I gavo her several noses or Foley's Money anu Tar and she was Instantly rcllovod. It saved her life. Campbell &. Co. Citizens of Lexintrton have pro sented a loving cup to Lieut. Luclon Young, In recognition of his services on too ntst miring tne war witu Spain. Dlzzinoss, loss of nppotlte, nausea af?2ri .iiiafcjLagrss luTTTCTpptm- es1 rniiiiv jpajaWarfjf futil-ity,b- ut .4?.y. ' You! cou-uvc- nurl Ilnfii1nii(.v nl-- nil (.firmnnfpfl ivlfh Herblno dyspasia or Indigestion. will givo prompt rellof. Price CO cts. t. isornaru j'rugsiore. At a school election In Morgan county a gonerni ngiit aroso, in which Kelso Burton was killed, Bam Reed probably fatally shot and two of Burton's brothers wounded. To Stimulus a Sluf flib Llvar, Uaniih Ullloui-DeDliptrte Drspepila, Piarenl Sick and Nervous Headache, Die Dr. II A. Slmmont Lirer Medicine, coun-ilinan- .- Jeffer-sonvill- e. i itnll-roa- Coal dealers nt Lexington havo made another advance of 80 per cent, in the price of coal. The matron of a well known Masonic Home mentions one inmate, ' seventy years of age, who has been in the infirmary for three vicars, a great sufferer from indigestion, and has been taking Kipans Tab-ule-s about a year and a half and finds them so beneficial that he is never without them. He is willing that his name should be used in a testimonial, as it might be of use in persuading some other person to try them. A second old gentleman, in the same institution, eighty-fou- r years of age, has had liver trouble for many years and finds that .'I'P'A'N'S help him very much. They also have two nurses there, one thirtyyears of age, the other forty-two- ; both suffer from indigestion, causing headache, depression of spirits, and nervousness. They take the Tabules and find them so useful that they always have a package in their pockets. The matron also states years of age and at times'suffers with indigesthat she is forty-fiv- e tion, causing pain and paroxysms of belching, and finds that the Tabules are very good indeed and is perfectly willing to have her -name used in a testimonial. t BIPAmvUllistUMnt. Th.rbl,HpInJ roWilU. OM It I !i (tTMrtlur. Km. Ui irart II M(rMaM h Uu uikin ud uoii u. MKrMCkU for Uracil, pur bakukl at any drus wr, Twi wuaplm aoj oa. thouMaJ uaumoaJato hm-uu- , MU4UajKJd (art emu, forwarded U U lUinu Chrakai Ofc. a. Ilrn,.-li- . York. nf ston-cilo- I The Banner Pile Cure. Is Banner Salvo. It gives Imme diate rellof and will soon elfect a cure. 26c. Campbell & Co. Tho Odd Fellows' Grand Lodgo of Kentucky mot nt Paducah Monday d in Its annual session, wttn nbout isuo ueiegatcs in attend sixty-secon- A BOON TO MANKIND! t ir 'i D" TABLER'S BUCKEYE 53,' in PJ1U nnee. jMMmiuJ.rar PILE T1 in g, I Scott's mulsion I highly valuable preparatlon,capablo, from tlio promptitude of its action, of clearing tho system in ft fow hours of ovory worm. Prlco 25 cts. St. Bornord Drugstore T. C. Ruttle is endcnvorlng to or tranlzo ft stock company for the erec tlon of ft canning factory nt Owens- ooro witn cnpncity lor io,ouu enns per ony. Whlto'B Crenm Vermlfugo Is n !LiJ',rSS lM4laTV OVI. 31 a cl CURE A New Discovery for the Certain Cure of INTERNAL and EXTERNAL PILES, WITHOUT PAIN. tubes, by Mail, 76 cents; bottles, so cents, WKSF.WLLARD.SP'fWkttrf, - - .310 NtrHl Htil Slntf, ST. CURES WHERE ALL OTHERS HAVE FAILED. LMNS. Dl4UAtNUBIAN TEA cures Djspep. IhIHvI sis, Ccntip.tlon Md Indigestion. Regulate theliTM-- . Price, 25 eta. jo.-- r Sold by St. Bernard Drug Store. Mt. A s Tift aitta.--- t J -- "MLt- - ' MiBMha tarfx.. ''gffi&im WmWSBfSmtWx w'ar-?'-''"f- i ' r - n- - jMi-- M iXMJLiui&l.i;.i ' L 1 J o, TENTH YEAR. EARLINGTON, HOPKINS COUNTY, KENTUCKY, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1899.-SUPPLEM- ENT. NO. 41 upon tho subject Is- - not to be accepted as true. But If these speeches left any room far doubt on the subject, It was wholly removed by his positive denial at Cynthlana on the 29th day of September, and telegraphed from that place on tho next day. Having been Obkcd about the statements contained la a recent letter received by him from August Belmont Esq, Mr. Goebel oatd: FIGURES M LIE But. the Kentucky Democratic Liars Will Figure. TIIAT B0H00L FDND BTAL Soma infcrostiiiR Facte Are Shown by Iho Official Kecorda. VITAL QUESTIONS nNANflWEBED A Brsttm nf Democratic Bookkeeping That 8a Manipulated the Receipts of Klglit Years as tit Defeat the School Fund of II Legitimate Share lu the Baiue An Kdllorlal Itavlos; Act m Uoowaravg. ! '?& f ft k-- . A " t "3, pit,. Tbe mixture of slang and falsehood Quoted below la from the Livingston Banner of Aug. 24, 1899, a small sheet published at Smlthland, Ky of which the Qoebel candidate for superintend eat of public Instruction Is editor: IVr capita 16B3, list year of Demo- (2.60 cratlc rule IVr capita ISM, Ortt year of republican rule ...,,. 2.30 IVr capita 1M7, second year of Ite- publican rule .;,.. ....... 2.20 IVr capita lMW, Ulrd year of Repub, llcan rule 2.70 GO From 1)3 to --JO, a shortage of 0.) 1'rfiui to 'OT a shortage of I'roru 'VI to "8S, a shortage of.,,.,,,, .50 10 Truiii 1)8 to IK) a shortage of .Adding, we bare a shortage In the four years of ll.fiO per pupil. Multiplying tbli by 700,000, the number of schoolchildren lu the itate, we have $1,266,000 shortage while the Hill Taylor gang baa bail charge of tbe stale affairs. It Is up to somebody We want to know what beto explain came of thn dough. A balf rullllon voters In Kentucky are "rolling for tbe explanation. t'rr capita lican rule 1SWI, bit ;fr of Uepub- ..2.30 - thieves, came from a fund that be- ods of enumeration then in vogue, had, longed to former years. Furthermore, for years prior to 1897, exceeded 1.3 per the aggregate loss to tho school fund cent. But putting the rate at only 1.25 during tbe Ave years ending June 30, per cent for each of tbe four years of 1899, from this shrinkage In property "Republican rule," beginning with values, wholly cbargeablo to a Dem- 727,723 in 1896, the census for 1897, ocratic national administration, as 1898, 1899 and 1900 would havo stood compared with tho assessment from 736,819, 746,029, 765,354 and 764,795 rewhich the school fund of 1894 was ob- spectively, instead of 736,109, 718,524, tained, exceeded $350,000, an annual 710,325 and 718,359 respectively, tbe actual census under methods inaugaverage of over (70,000. tho per capita was fixed at urated by the present administration. $2.75, 19 cents in excess of what tho NOTABLE REFORMS INSTITUTED. year's net school revenues justified, These corrections In tho census footand tho previous year's surplus of ed up In four years at least 120,000, at I177.C20.08 was thus reduced to a saving of $300,000 thus far tq tbe With revenues that produced schools. real situation does only $2.56 on the pupil child and a not appearBut the last two of the four till the per capita surplus of only C cents, "It years, after both tho law now governup to" The Banner to explain how is ing tbe census and tbe present regulatho conclusion was reached that $2.80 tions adopted for taking the enumeracould be paid the following year. tion, became operative The difference The net school fund of 189G, "tho for each of these years la over 45,000 last year under Democratic rule," pupil children, a saving of $230,000 In available for per capita purposes, was 1899 and 1900. Tho methods by which $1,782,203.04, equal to $2.44 on the these reforms wero secured Is now a year's enumeration of 727,723 children. part of tho Judicial and political hisIn addition, It got the benefit of tory of tbe state--. in bank taxes that had been In 1888 tbe per capita was fixed at held back In former years pending tho $1.90, while the school revenues jus"Pryor decision," and the aforesaid tified $2.25. The. teachers of tbe stato 3. $44,000.76 in effect, a surplus of contributed that year 35 cents on tho These Items together approxi- pupil child to the Tate defalcation and mated a per capita of $2.C3, leaving 17 tho "general expenditure on tho pupil child, or specificalcents to the one and $106,648.42 ly, $119,327.93, to be made good out to tho other. Nearly half of the defalof the revenues of "the first year un- cation was afterward recovered. der Republican rule," a "shortage," in became of Uie $63,000 belonging What to tbe all, of $257,988.46. school fund thus net school fund for 1897, "the $106,648.42 taken returned? Why was The from that year's first year under Republican rule," was school fund and "dumped" Into tho '$1,772,355.50, equal per Irr-18- 95 $93,-C99.- 77 $138,-600.6fund"-1115,67- CAPTAIN STONE'S SIDE More Light Thrown Upon the Louisville Convention. THAT WBITTEN.'AGREEMENT Between nimself and tlio Fraudulent Candidate For Governor. IT HAS MYBTLBIODSLY VANISHED. From the Time That Radwlne Was Klseted Chairman, Ooebel and His Ilk Bare Not Ouly Striven to Destroy tbe Captain rstlttealty, hot to lllast n s High Reputation For Uoneity and Integrltr. Captain Stone came to town yesterday and stopped at tho Wlllard as usual. A Dispatch reporter went to him for information as to the whereabouts of the written agreement between himself and Qoebel. He could not tell but he had a story scarcely less interesting. "It was charged after the convention," said tbe captain, "that I had entered into a corrupt bargain to rob Hardin of his votes. I Ignored this for some time, but so persistent was the charge that I felt that I could no longer rest under such an Imputation. "When the agreement was signed, Urey Woodson was present He and Mr. Qoebel having written nnd signed tho document. I read it carefully and finding it In accordance with the understanding ou towhat we should put In writing, signed it. The paper was turned over to Woodson with the understanding that be was to keep It, subject to such disposition as both Mr. Qoebel and myself should agree upon. (He was not to give It to one without tne consent oi me otner, nor was ne to show It to anybody without the consent of both. "During the excitement in the convention on Saturday afternoon after Hardin had withdrawn, when my friends were demanding that Qoebel withdraw In accordance with bis promise, Ooebel came over to where I was sitting on tho stage. I noticed that ho had the written agreement we bad signed In his hand. I asked him where he got that. He replied that Woodson had just put It Into his hand. Of course I knew Immediately that the paper was being circulated among some of my friends to convince them that Ooebel bad never promised to withdraw in my favor, and that all the agreement between us was In writing. Pinched by Woodson. "The charge Uat I bad entered into a corrupt bargain was so persistently made otter tho convention that I decided to seek Woodson and if possiblo secure a copy of tbe agreement I went to Owensborp Wednesday, Sept. 7, for this purpose. When I ask,ed Woodson for a copy of the agreement he refused upon tbe ground that It was tho understanding that he was to keep it subject to the joint order of Mr. Ooebel nnd myself. When I confronted him. with tho fact that Qoebel had It on tbe stage In Music Hall on Juca 24 in violation of this understanding, he said Ooebel bad sent for 'Then cither you or Qoebel has lied,' I re piled. 'Qoebel says you put it into his hand.' He Insisted that Ooebel had Bent for It When pressed further as to why ho would not give me a copy of tho agreement, he said Its publication would injure the Demo cratic party. I told him It that were true he had a document purporting to be an agreement which I had never signed. The publication of tho document resigned would not hurt the Democratic party or any of Its members. But ho still refused. asked bltn It ho had the agreement Ho said Jie didn't have hlmv but that it was in a safe place where nobody would see It "'Urey,' I said. 'Ooebel has that agreement in violation of our distinct understanding, Now hasn't he?' " 'No,' he sold, In a hesitating manner. . Warm Interview. "Naturally our Interview was grow ing warm by this time. I told him from tho time that Redwlne was elect ed chairman of the Music hall convention, he and Qoebel had not only striven to destroy mo politically, but to blast my reputation for honesty and Integrity; that I sought a copy of that agreement to clear myself of the charge of a corrupt bargain, and still be refused to give up a copy; that it waa at the disposal of his matter, Ooebel, to be used for all hrs purposes, but that I could not secure a copy of It in defense of my reputation." Reverting to the events of the convention, Captain Stone related many .Interesting details, which have not been described heretofore. "From the beginning of the negotiations for joint action In organizing. It was generally conceded by Qoebel and o Woodson when they were In my that Goebel could not win and that my nomination was the only possible result. The organization was fha principal thing about which they seemed concerned. The written agreement provided that we were to join our forces to elect a temporary chairman upon whom we were both to agree. We were eaeb'to name a man for tho stale at largo on tho creden- A, s1- Not satisfied with this display of pitiable Ignorance or vIcIqim and demagogucry. The Danner, In a later "editorial," Indulges In the silly cant and malicious misrepresentation that follows: Tbe srbool fund per capita last year was $XMi this year It Is $2.70. We bar been asked for an etplanatlon of tbls. It Is very simple and easily explained. The state auditor's report as to Ibe source from which tbls year's fund Is dertred, shows tbst 1203,212.09 Is balance from last year. . There Here last year In round numben '700,000 pupil children In the state. Dlrld-le- g f2R3.242.0O by TOO.OOO. we bare a quotient of about 37 ceuts. This 37 rents, due every child In the ststa last year, should bare brea paid last year, snd tbe per capita shoal hare Pern $2.67 Instead of $2.30. Why was It beld back? filmply to ratsa the rr capita this year became a cam palgn Is on. The administration stole from the teachers of year and aro paytnf It to tbe teachers last of this yer with tbe boe of gaining rotes. ir etery teacher In the state were to teach tie same school this yrar be taught last, year after It he would get bis money was due bltn but they do not all succeed thomselres, and about 13 per cent of tboe who taught last yrar do not teach at all tbls year; this class has been robbed outright We bad become so accustomed to republican, thefts that we thought nothing they might do could surprise us, but. we must confess that tbe audacity of this steal takes dur breath away; It Is about the coolest piece of robbery erer perpetrated la the commonwealth Another retnarkatdj) feature of tbe case Is tbst, after holding- tbe fund back last year and for three years previous and dumping It all Into tbls year's fund, they till fsll short 13 cents of wbst the per capita was when they took charge four years ago. It was then $2 63. It only takes a little figuring; Jnst here to show that with the cr rsplta op to $2.70 this yesr there Is still the neat little sum of f 1,400 unaccounted for In tho four years on the basis of n per capita of $2 83, which the Democratic administration psld Its teachers last year. We are at a loss to know how a decent republican can vote for the BUI Taylor gang again with facta like these starlnz - K t S capita of to a $2.41. This am6unt was reduced by the Democratic deficit of 1890 to Combined, the net revenues of 1896 and 1897 amounted to a sum $102,605 06 short of a per capita of $2.80 the one and $2.20 tho other year. TUB MINIMUM SCHOOL FUNDS Tho net school fund of 1893, namely, $1,626,165.03. was tho smallest slnco 1891. Various cauaea contributed to this decrease. Tho assessment as of Sept 15. 1896, was $48,000,000 under that of four years earlier and $14,000,-00- 0 under that of three years later. It received from banks acalat $135,898 55 In 1897 and 1b 1806,aredudtioa In part due to the fact that in 1898, under the "Payn-te- r decision," tho banks paid Into tho school fund only 22 cents on each $100 in valuo of their property Instead of 1 of 75 cents, or over 39 cents, under the "Pryor decision." This difference of over 17 cents meant a loss of about $75,000 to the school fund for 1898 and- an equal amount for each subsequent year. Another sourco of loss to the school fund for tbls year, at well as for 1899 and 1900, bad Its origin In tho debt "Democratic rule" bequeathed to "Re publican rule." Tbe school fund Is entitled to such portion of licensee, fines and forfeiture), realized oy the state as the amount of taa iax com mon school purposes beat 8 to the whole state tax. By tho addition of 10 cents to the tax rate to pay the old debt tho school fund lost over 10 per 1 cent tho difference between and $236,-767.- 68 11-211-2- "general "expenditure fund?" Not only the equalized value of taxable property, but tbe amount of taxes collected rr t banks, railroads aud other corporations In 1890 was largely in excess of those for 1889, but the schools got $164,201.26 less In 1890 than in 1889. Why this difference? Why was $94,854.90 belonging to tho school fund of 1893 turned into the "general expenditure fund?" What about a system of Democratic bookkeeping that so manipulated $285,412.47 in receipts from clerks between 1888 and 1896 as to defeat tho school fund of Its lcgltlmato share in the same? Many other points, explanations of which could, but Interest teachers, show themselves In tbe Democratic record, but they await answers to questions herein. Louisville Commercial. the effect that It the contesting delegates from Louisville wero seated, I was to get half of tbe votes. The agreement as to tho committees and tho vote for chairman waa carried out, but I was to name ono man for each of the committees and Judgo Jones of Barren county for membst of tho state central and executive committees for tho state at large. "Mayor "Weaver camo to my room after the agreement had been reached and assured me that If the Louisville contestants were seated I would ,'gct halt the votes. Yet on the first ballot they went solidly for Goebel and were ready to go to him at any time to defeat me and nominate Qoebel. "Mr. Buah of Hopklnsvllle was tho only member on the credentials for whom I was responsible. The others who were my friends wero elected by the districts. After leaving Owensboro I went to Hopklnsvlllo to see Mr. Buah and ask him his recollection of my relations to the credentials committee. Ho eays I never asked him to do anything except what was fair and right according to the evidence. When tho credentials committee had completed Its work three of my friends sent for me to consult about the report I told them I wanted only what was fair and right. "The threo friends of mine on the committee on credentials are honorable gentlemen, and I know did not do anything In that committee except what eeemed to them right from the testimony produced. "There Is nothing more to tell about the positive promise of Qoebel to withdraw In my favor. His whole crowd has already been silenced by what I ea!d Immediately after the convention. Tbe statements made then have not been denied and can not be without disregard for the truth." Louisville com-mitt- EXPOSED BY CARLISLE Despicable Duplicity of Wobbling William Goebel. THAT WA8HINGT0N CONFAB "'Why, every word of It Is a Ho; and can't you see that the whole Wholo Trntli Tersely Told by the scheme of Belmont and Carlisle is to destroy me with tbe allver Deoole of Former Secretary of State. TfAnfiiftlfvl' KENT0H BOSS IS A BAD LIQHr. Dow lie Secured Control or Ills County Organisation nnd now tie Got Ills Delegation Admitted to the State Convention In 1800, and nil t Followed, nonorable Men Alked to Form Thelt . Own Cone'nilons. Mr, Goebd's conference in Washington with Mr. Carlisle prior to the Democratic state convention ct 1896, has a profound interest for all men who care for fair dealing and upright tonduct That story is herewith presented in full over the signature of John G. as bearing out tho whole story. The letter of Mr. Goebel to Mr. Carlisle la given below In full. "New York, Oct 4, 1899. "Richard W. Knott, E3q, Loulavllle, Ky.: "Dear Sir: Your letters and the newspaper clippings enclosed in them wero duly received, and I am aleo In receipt of several other communicaCar-Hal- e, Dspatch. Lllii In tbe face. SOURCES OF SCHOOL FUND. few . v In the face of the facts as shown by the record, not only the audacity and baseness, but tho .absurdity and rash-ceof these Insults become apparent. Thn annual school fund Is derived principally from these source), I (a share of taxes collected by sheriffs; taxes on distilled spirits, banks, railroads and other corporations; taxes on corporatefranchlses; licensee, f.ncj and forfeitures; and Interest on bink and stock bonds, tho Interest Item Icing the only ono that remains fixed from year to year. As everyone, except the editor of The Banner knows, the fund avatlablo for that purpose and tho number of children among whom It Is to bo distributed, determine) the per capita; that Is, the per capita from yearto year bears tho same reUTTERLY GROUNDLESS. lation to these numbers as the quoHow utterly groundless are this cantient to tho divisor and dividend In didate's Infamous charges Is emphaslniplo division. sized by the fact that tho averake per On June 30, .1852, soon after the last capita Justified by tho net revenues democratic administration came Into under the present administration, on power, the school fund had to its cred--- I, n much larger average census, equals the enormous surplus of $357,353.24, the average for the last eight years equal to 55 cents per capita. In pay"under Democratic rule." More than ing $2.50 per capita for 1893 this sur- that, tho average per capita furnished plus was reduced" to $314,777.42. In by the revenues of this period equals meeting tho per capita of $2.85 In 1894, the average for the last 12 years. the one the last "editorial" selects for But will this "slangwhanger" himits partisan rant, the enormous reve- self turn explainer long enough to tell nues of that year wero exhausted and the teachers of the 119 counties In tbe aforesaid surplus was reduced tn Kentucky, and especially those of the $177,620,08. Revenues from almost little county of Livingston, of what every sdurco reached tho high-watthey were robbed outright by a Demmark in 1894. The equalized taxable ocratic administration In carrying value of tho Mate's real and personal over a balance of $357,353.24 in 1892T property reached the magnificent total What of tho last Democratic adminof ?B9G,799,07C, which was reduced In istration that dealt lu balances o'jo year of that period of Democratic amounting to $665,780.19? What of panic and disaster, aptly termed tbe Democratic negligence or Indifference "Mark Friday" lni American economic that bad permitted certain favored tUersry.'to $671,310,342, a shrinkage of cities of the state, for at least 15 years the schools the prior to 1857, annually to draw large flK,S78.7Ve8tl!iK following year over $0,6W. Thla sums, the aggregate reaching Into the MeemerH of nearly $3OO,O00,-00- 0 millions, from tbe school fund, by , tho had dwindled In lT-8means of padded census returns, and year,." that forms a basis for thus to rob other less favored sections The Banner's last assault, to $549,419,-to this extent? a depreciation of $47,379,006. This That this was done "Is very simple shrinkage alone reduced tho school and easily explained." That these fund of 18WC as compared with 1894, practices, made possible by Demo$100,000. cratic legislation and winked at by Democratic officers, coet,the people of CAUSB OF SHRINKAGE. Moreover, the school raven ua of other cities and the teachers of tho 1884, which was $166,715.91 In1 excess of smaller towns and rural sections of is the that for 18061, Justified a per capita of also state an enormous amount, ex"very simple and easily (Wly'tzOS. Thus it la seen that 20 cents of the per capita that this falsi-fl- plained." The4 state superintendent's uses In his endeavor to show tba reports show that the annual Increase 'Bill Taylor gang' an aggregation of in the school census, uader the meth ss to-w- lt: er mag-jJSeean er must contribute many thousands of dollars each of tho threo years tho Increased rate Is In forco to the payment of tho old Democratic debt. The net fund of 1899 was $1,824,-CS- C 03. $2.67 on 710,325 children. Neither thla Increase of $198,470.75 over tho fund of 1898 nor tho large decrease In the numVer of schoolchildren as compared with the census "the last year of Democratic rule," is credited to that party. This Increase, which was Included In the "robber balance of $265,242.09," was made up largely from collections from a class of corporations that The "Banner's gang" bad for years generously excused from taxation. Ono single Item from railroad franchises alone swelled tbls balance by $91,976.02. Banks turned In largo sum that had been withheld oa ou account of litigation and that did not figure In the estimate on which tho apportionment was made. The auditor's estimato of receipts, Including the balance from last year, upon which the apportionment of 1900 was made, shows a gross total of a sunt sufficient to pay $2.70 on 718,359 children and to meet other charges against It. Had the "Bill Taylor gang" seen ftt to saddle such a deficit on tho next administration, as It was forced to meet, on taking "chargo of tho state affairs," it could have fixed tho per capita at $2.90 for the current year. of all sums realized from theso sources. Thus the teachers of tho state, by virtue of a Democratic law, 11-2- 6 in vain for tbe name of William Qoebel as voting for or against tho motion. In fact, there seems to have been a persistent absence of William Qoebel from the floor of the senate during the debate on the bill and during the proposal of the many amendments. Tho Journal only disclosed that William Qoebel did not vote. He may have been frantically in favor of tbe measure, or ho may have been genuinely opposed to It. But, for some reason or other, his favor or his opposition failed to materialize on the question. And his dodging only adds another proof to the fact that on questions of principle the nominee of the police and firemen of Louisville straddles or dodges lor policy. From Covington Special to Loulsvlllo Evening Post. The Ooebcl managers have admitted that their campaign in western Kentucky has gone for aaught by sending "Babe" Bailey back thero for two weeks of vlgoroua speedimaklng. Mr. Taylor baa been drawing Qoebel'a true picture for the astonished Democrats of the first district. Will Avail Naoght. Straws In tha Wind. Indeed tba Coach Iltlt. On the subject of the separate coach bill, William Ooebcl is dodging now as he dodged when U,e vote was taken on the Important luasure. Tbe final vote came on Manb. 31, 1892, and the Journal of tho senate is searched In vain for the name of William Qoebel as voting either way. The final vote having been taken, Senator Miller moved to reconsider the vote by which the bill passed, and moved to lay the motion on tho table. And again the journal of the senate will be searched tions from friends In Kentucky and ream Which H cht Appear elsewhere asking for such information In School Readers. Note: The following beautiful poem a3 I possess concerning the position might appear in tie new series o of Hon. William Gcebel on the quesSchool Readers soon to be published tion of free coinage of silver prior to 'Job' Com- the meeting of the state convention by the "Curious-Journpany" for the school children of Ken- at Lexington In 1896. "As I wrote you some time ago and tucky: havo said to all others who have spoThere's a game that I can play Me and Jo; ken or written to me on the subject, I'm a corker In my tray my deairo was to abstain from any Jo; -Me and participation, directly or indirectly, In I can steal a nomination, the political contest now going an In I can light n corporation. And my fees In compensation Kentucky, and, If possible, afford the Are C3 per cent or so. parties engaged In It no pretext for tho use of my name In connection with I'm a "hot shot" on a speech Me and J6; any of tho questions Involved. It was I can cuss or pray or preach known, however, that Mr. Goebel baif Me and Jo; visited Washington a short time before When I talk of that convention Judgelet Redwlne I don't mention the state convention In 1896, and that , L. & N. gets my attention. he had conferred with me upon the I try to make that old "gag" go. political situation In Kentucky; nnd the fact that such a conference had near me howling at the "Trust" Me ond Jo; taken place had been stated In the pubSee me hustle, fer I must lic press with many details as to the Me end Jo; purpose of the meeting and the 'agreeIn the senate I attend ments' alleged to have been made beTo cigarette bills for my friend A Beautiful al ME AND 4.O. And "dongh." who "stands In" bandies all tire Trust'a good tween us on now Me and Jo; There ore others, too young Chlnn Had a book bill tn the "swim," Tbst I killed "too dead to skin" But Morgan never knew It though. 1 lovo the working man Me and Jo: And I "work" him all I ca- n- Aa a boss I'm surely "IT" Me and Jo; I'M tbe people's savior NIT Me ond Jo; If I falut, take off my coat, Bo tbe people all may note The daggers, guns and combs I tote. Spellbinding through the state with Jo. "Although theso publications were erroneous in many particulars, they did not purport to be based on information derived from me. and I did not feel it incumbent upon me to them further than to say In private conversations with a few friends who inquired about the matter, that tie newspaper accounts of the Jnter-vleand its purposes were not correct Afterward a Washington paper published a statement in which I was represented as saying that the conferno-tl- co w that occasion. reported to be preparing a bitter personal attack upon the Hon. John Q. Carlisle. Mr. Carlisle has already demonstrated, however, that Mr. Ooebel is not to be believed under oath "Mr. Ooetoel Is SHATTUC Refara to tha VS. ATKINSON. as - "Soxppleg- Copperhead." An Associated Press dispatch from Cincinnati sayB: In reply to another letter from Ei ward Atkinson of Boston, representaCongresstive of the man W. B. Shattuc of this city, has written a lengthy communication, refusing to retract anything in his former correspondence. Ho denounces all "whose snapshooting Is from the rear," and closes thus: "The war Is tho people's war. They Inaugurated it, and they will stan'd by the administration, which Is endeavoring to carry out their will, that tbe rebellion bo suppressed and order restored in the Philippine Islands, without regard to tbe bulletin front and the snapping copperheads, like you, in the rear. "Congress, and not tho president, will in due time determine what kind of government Bhould bo established in the Philippines, but this question will never be definitely Bcttled while our government is confronted by an armed force." The Gold Supply. The gold In circulation In the United States on September 1, 1899, was, according to the figures of tho treasury department, $072,993,192 against at tho date of Mr. Bryan'a.nom-lnatloan increase of nearly 50 per cent, meantime, which is a very discouraging fact to those who insisted during the campaign of 1896 that the gold mines of the country were not sufficient to furnish the proper Increase In the world's currency. The population of the United States has Increased about five per cent, during tbls period, and with our gold increasing nearly 50 per cent, meantime, It is difficult to understand why tbe silver theorists should Insist upon continuing to press for the free coinage of silver. n, $463,-895,9- 09 MsysylH" Ledger. Former Confederates Pat tbe Casstlon to Wobbling William Ooebel. Russellvllle, Ky., Sept 19. The following very Interesting communication to William Qoebel baa been pre pared by of this place: To the Hon. vIlllam Qoebel: statement erroneously attributed to Wo, tho undersigned, ates of Russellvllle; Ky., note with in- me, or permit it to be Improperly us;d terest the questions put to you by some to advance tbe interests of one of tbe of our Confederate brethren of Glas- candidates. I immediately denied it gow, calling upon you to namo the In a brief statement, and so far as I Hall&m to whom you refer as having was concerned the matter would have been convicted of a civil crime, and rested there If my attention had not to state whsn and where said Hallam been called since that time to certain was sent to the penitentiary. statements bearing on the subject We are Informed through' a newsmade by Mr. Goebel and his friends paper which is supporting you that In public speeches and otherwise. you ihad this to say at Henderson in N Mug n FaliehiMid. reference to the above charge: "In n speech delivered at Palntsvlllo "I don't care to say anything more Mr.' Goebel Is reported us follows about this Hallam family further than " 'He then reviewed what ho had this: Ho had a brother who was not done for bimetallism, calling attention In the Confederate army, nnd It was to tho fact that he led Mr. Blackburn's that brother who was tn the peniten- fight for tho scnato; that he headed bis tiary, It was tho lost Hallam men- delegation ato Lexington In 1896, and tioned la the letter of H. C. Hallam, cast tho 30 votes of his county for a brother of Theodore Hallam, published free silver chairman; that his county in a Louisville paper." had given Bryan an Increased majorJn referring to tbe letter from H. C. ity; that ho gavo $700 to tho Bryan Hallam, which you mention, we And campaign fund, and that he was chairthat tho only brother there referred the committee which wolcomed to was named J. R. Hallam, Jr., and he man of to Covington and Frankfort' served In the Confederate army In Bryan " 'On tbe next day, In n speech at regiment, as stated by II. C. Hanson's denyHallam and corroborated by the his- Prestonsburg, he Is reported as tory of tho orphan ibrlgade, page 618, ing that 'he was In correspondence which ehows that he has an exceed- with onyono to send a gold hug delegation to tho Chicago convention;' and ingly credltablo record. Now, in view of these conflicting on several occasions ho Is reported to statements, we Insist that you make havo mado statements as to his political action In 189C, calculated, and further explanation of tho matter. doubtless intended, to creato tho imJ. B. BRIGGS, Brig. Gen. commanding Second Ken. pression that what has been said by mo concerning his nttltudo at tho time, tucky Brigade, V. C. V. on the question of free silver was not S. B. RYAN, true. He Is reported to have said only JOHN W. CALDWEL1 a few days ago at Versailles: B. B. ANDREWS, " 'When tho Lexington convention J. M. DALE, met In June, 1S96, I appeared thero at H. K. WHITE. These veterans of the Confederacy the head of the Kenton county delegaaro waiting to hear Qoebel's reply. He tion, an unlnstructed delegaton from must answer or go branded as an orig- tho home county of John G. Carlisle, inator and disseminator of falsehoods. candidate for president and I cast the vote of that county for Charles J. Loulsvlllo Dispatch. Bronaton for chairman, the free sliver Unanswered Prnyera. candidate, and against Aloxander P, Many cf our prayers are nnanswered Humphrey, the single gold standard tials, organisation and resolutions com- simply becauso they are against God's candidate, and I cast that vote and my mittees, and one each of the members way pf doing. We ask to bo taken out own for the platform thero adopted, of the stato committees for the etate of tho world not by death, but by deliv- which declared for the free and unlimat large, the man named by Qoebel to erance. Our deairo is to live, but opart ited colnago of silver at tho ratio of 10 bo chairman. from real life. Smh is not tho divino to'l, and Instructed the Kentucky delpurpose, Jeans Himself submitted to egation at Chicago to cast Kentucky's In Case of Cnnlest. Presbyterian vote not "In case of contests between myself every lmuiau courtitlon for John O. Carlisle, but for and Hardin, If tbe evidence was in Journal, Joseph C. S. Blackburn.' favor of my delegates, Qoebel was to Tbt l.lttle Tli Intra. "It is'quito clear, I think, from theso uso bis Influence to have them seated. It Is wblli' wm lire iii tiuitly tolling statements and similar onea made at Iu contests between Ooebel and Har- at the litik- - ttxitht of lift-- that tbu mean' various other places that Mr. Goebel din where tbe proof was for aoeoel's lug urn! iJimjk' of thu tprcut wholo of llfo Intends the peoplo of Kentucky to undelegates I was to use my influence to dawn,! win.- - It )i while ion uro re- - derstand that ho waa not bave them seated. ttfiNpwttions that jou are with me In support cf the gold stand"Thre was a verbal agreement to r." Puillipii Brooks. ard In 1890, and that my statement lUr prea-enc- it ARISE AND ANSWER! ence between me and Mr. Goebel did not relato to tho silver question, but to local matters only. The necessary effect of such a publication, which I understand was promptly telegraphed to Kentucky for use tn thotampalgn, waa not only to Introduce my name Into tho controversy, but also to place me In a false position In relation to the parties engaged In It. I was, therefore, compelled to either deny the Upon Their Mltfortnne. Mr. Gocbel'a devotion to tne railroad employes is remarkable. In the first place he lores them so fondly that ho drew the charters of the cities of tho second class so that they could not serve In tho council. Saloon keepers, poolroom owners, gamblers, tramps and beggars may serve In the council of Covington, Newport and Lexington, of May, 1896. but no brakeman, engineer, conductor, The Trne Story, "About the middle of May, 1896, W." BWltchman or any man in the employ of a railroad. B. Haldeman. Esq., of Louisville, But theso employes may serve Wilcalled at my residence In Washington and after some conversation about the liam Goebel in other ways. If they political situation In Kentucky end the will get hurt or get killed he has his contest then going on between the ad- runners out with contracts to be vocates and opponents of free colnago signed by which he la to for the control of tho state convention, and under which he takes from 60 to he expressed a desire that I should 65 cents out of every dollar he receives. have a conference with Mr. Goebel on Tha effect Is that Ooebel gets rich, tbe subject, wbo, he said, was thor- whllo the poor man or his family llvo oughly tn accord with my views and In poverty all their lives, for after paywas anxious to wlth.me: anr1 ing tho doctor and druggist, little remy friends In our efforts to secure thV mains to a Blgner of a Goebel contract election of sound money delegates to It makes interesting reading, and tho stato convention and the national thero Is more to follow. All wo desire convention to be held In Chicago. For to add hero Is that it was in one of reasons which were then stated to Mr. these cases that Mr. Goebel brought Haldeman I was reluctant to accede to down the public condemnation upon, the request but upon his statement himself from Judge Taft "for jugglery that he had very recently talked with with the law." him on tho subject, and that he (GoeTeonta nnd the Tar IK bel) was In full accord with us, I It may be worth while to notice two agreed that it he called on me I would confer with him. The Impression left points made by Mr. Bryon in hla upon my mind was that Mr. Ooebel speech In Chicago denouncing home was-no- t then In the city, but expected truuts. Mr. Bryan said: "If an article to come in a few days. However, the can be produced In this country aa next morning ho called at my office lo tne treasury department, and we had cheaply as It can be produced abroad, quite a long conference. He began by then the trust could exist without tho stating at considerable length the rea- benefit of any tariff at all, although it sons why be had supported Mr. Blackcould not extort so much. No one can burn for tho United States senate at dispute that a tariff law, an impost the preceding session of the legislature, but as these reasons were not duty, enables a trust to charge for its political, but personal, they had no product tho price of a similar foreign bearing on the subject of the confer-onc- e, product plus the tariff." The price of and need not bo stated here. He foreign cotton ties bafore tho McKinley then explained to mo tbe situation In bill became a law was $1.12 a bundle. The duty Imposed by this law was $1.03 Kenton county. According to his statement there were two rival county com- n bundle and tbe price of the American cotton ties, while tho tariff was in mittees, the Hon. Harvey Myers claiming to be chairman of one and Mr. force, waa 90 cents and then 85 cents a bundle. There was no extortion Goebel himself claiming to be chairman of the other. Ho gave me the whatever, because the price was 25 per history of tho controversy, and from cent lower under the law than It waa his statement ot the facts I was satis- before the tariff ot $1.03 a bundle was fied that tho committee ot which ho Imposed on foreign cotton ties. If Mr. wa3 chairman had been regularly Bryan's assertion that "no one can deny that a tariff law.'an Impost duty, chosen at a' Democratic primary elec a trust tlon held for that purpose, under tht enables price ot to charge for Its proda similar foreign prodorder of tho state committee, and that uct the plus the tariff" was true, the price It ought to be recognized. Each of the uct contesting committees, as ho Informed of the American cotton ties would nave advanced to $2.15 a bundle. The Mcme, was about to call conventions In Kinley law was repealed by the Demotho three legislative districts ot the cratic n law, the tariff county to select delegates to the statu ot $1.03 a bundlo taken off and cotton convention. Mr. Goebel represented ties left free ot duty. What was the that Mr. Myers and his committee result? A trust was organized and the wero In favor ot free silver, and that pries of cotton tics was advanced to the conventions called by them would $1.25 and then $1.40 a bundle, proving undoubtedly select free silver dele- In the most conclusive manner that ungates, while he (Goebel) and his com- der free trade "a trust could and did mittee were opposed to free silver, and extort outrageously without the benefit the conventions held under their call ot any tariff at all " The price of soda would choose sound money delegates. ash under free trade was $48 a ton. Under these circumstances he appealed The Solway Process company, the only to mo to uso whatever Influence I one In this country making soda ash, could" with the state committee to nnd therefore a monopoly, or American It to recognize his committee as trust, whllo the protective duty was $5 the regular party organization In the a ton, sold soda ash at $28 and 29 a county, and also to get the member ot ton. This proves there was no extortbe state committee wbo represented tion under the American trust, but that the Sixth (Covington) congressional extortion waa Bhameful under the fordistrict to recognize tho authority of eign trust Cnlreranl Pence. bis committee and its delegates at the Apart from tho temporal peaco bo preliminary meeting of the district delegates, which was to bo held beforo tween tho kingdom ou earth wo aro in tho stato committee was organized. I a higher souso also reminded cf tho promised to do so, and accordingly, at millennial reign of peace toward which my request, a gentleman went from tho signs of tho times aro clearly point Washington to Kentucky to see the iug. As followers ot Jesus, wo aro look, ing forward to that ideal government district member of the stato commitot God, indicated in tbe Scriptures, tee and get him to agree to recognize when shall rule His people in Mr. Goebel and his delegates at tho peace Christ and equity, "and wo aro aiding preliminary meeting, and thus secure tbo realization of this ideal aud tba their admission to the state convencoming ot God's kingdom just so far as tion. in our daily lives, in our business, in Duplcable Dnplicltr all our iutercourso with men, va maka "During our Interview we also distha principles of Christ's kingdom our cussed the prospects of securing sound own." For tho coming of this kingdom of peaco wo as Christians ought conmoney delegations from tbe counties ot Campbell and Pendleton, and Mr. stantly to labor and bo sincero when wo pray, "Lord, for Thy coming ui Goebel appeared to feel as much InterMoravian. est in the defeat of the free sliver forces In the state convention as I did. Clirlatlan Undeavor Rotes. There was .no reason whatever why I Two pounds 10 shillings by tho sale should Interfere, or should bo asked ot arrowroot was raised for JQibles for to Intcrfero In a contest between Mr. tho Now Hebrides by tho missionary Goebel and Mr. Myers except tbe fact coniuiltteo of tho St. Paul's Presbytethat ono was against tho free coinage rian Waugaunl Christian Endeavor soof silver and the other was In favor ciety, .New Zealand. of It, and this was tho solo ground A "buttonhole" committee isouo ot upon which Mr. Qoebel based bis re- tho means the Woolston Wesleyan my assistance. quest for Christian Eudcavor cooiety, Now Zea"Ho returned to Kentucky, and on land, uses to recruit its ranks. May 23 he wrote me a letter which Is India has raoro than 400 Christian herewith Inclosed, from which you Eudearor societies, tho number havlug see that the efforts made in his behalf much mora than doubled within tha had been successful, and that his twolvomontb. had been fully recognized. Ho A Ill's; Job. thus secured control of the county orIf Mr. Goebel carries out the threat ganization, got his delegates admitted of the Owensboro Messenger that after to the state convention, and went In the election ho will settle wltt his with them as their chairman. He now "slanderers" he will havo all he can dn publicly proclaims that his first act tho balance of his life. The wooda aro was to cast tbe entire vote of the del- full ot the clas3 the Messenger has egation in faycr of the free silver can- dubbed slanderers and whether Mr. didate for chairman ot the state con- Ooebcl usD3 hla "pocket comb," a gun vention, and that his last was to cast or tho courts, ho won't llvo long its entire vote In favor of a free silver enough to get around, But the Mesplatform. If ho did this, honorable senger clearly meant to bluff eoso oee gentlemen everywhere, whether they wHh Its threat or the Loulsvlllo aoari-lnare in favor of free coinage or the gold would break over the Una era tbo standard, will form their own conclu- November idee blow arouod, P4tte) sions aa to the propriety and good Sun. Wilson-Gormaco pro-pare-." " com-mltt- co ee -- '"Well, senator,' was the reply, 'do IjUnderstand you to say that a man With Carlisle's reputation would stoop to euch an act and tell as barefaced a. He as that?' " 'That Is what I mean,' said Goebel; 'and furthermore, I mean that this man Belmdnt is simply the tool of capitalists that would destroy any man who fights the corporations like I do nnd Is for the people.' "In view of theso affirmative statements and emphatic denials by Mr. Goebel, I feel bound In vindication of the truth of my former statement, to submit the facts to the people of Kentucky, leaving them to determine for themselves whether he was or was not an advocate of the gold standard and an opponent of tho free coinage of silver as late, at least, as the 23d day faith ot his conduct and it would be superfluous for me to mako any comment upon it. "My letter of May 20, 1896, to which his of tho 23d Is a reply. Is, I presume, in Mr. Qoebel's possession, and he is at liberty to publish it if he chooses. , "I, perhaps, ought to add that Mr. Haldeman: was not present during any part of tho Interview referred to, and that nothing was said about the control ot the organization u the Fifth congressional district or in the state; nor were any means suggested looking to the election or defeat ot any particular candidate for the United States senate. If anything was said in relation to the passage of a resolution by the state convention Indorsing me for any nomination, I do not remember it and my belief is that the subject was not mentioned. "J. Q. CARLISLE." RAILWAY BOYS. Coebel's Enmity and How lie Thrives V" hi i o i m E" fl Now, in regard to candidate Goo-bo- l, Tho majority of us only havo a nowspaper acquaintance with the BIGHTS OF THE NEGRO man, aud it would hardly bo fair to POLITICAL CAMPAIGN, discuss his personality, but since ho lias publicly announced his plans, purposes, nnd intentions, both bo- Burden of This Jin'ge's Charge PAUL. M. MOORB, Editor and Manner. As Seen by the Railway Em- lero and slnco his nomination, it Is to the Gra id Jury. ' perfectly iu lino to consider his ployes' Political Club of declarations. BEE PUBLISH1N0 COMPANY. In his opening speech for tho Loulsvllleand the State Incorporated ) nomination, at Lebanon, he endorsed EVANS LAYS DOWN THE LAW tho McChord bill, and said ho would Entered the Pcttoffice at Birllugton ti Secood at Large I use his Influonco to havo this or a ati matter. similar measure mado a law should this, If become VIEWED IN A BUSINESS LIGHT. ho no otherGovernor. For opposed Colored Citizens 31 ust llo Ficc to RATESSUBSCRIPTION reason, we are for Elt'ctivi! Franchise. to Goebel. In tho beginning of this campaign More than 1,200 brawny railroad Yejr.ttrletlrTnidrsnce . .. .It oo men, representing every largo sys- ho publically referred to us as "hireUna , , " so " Sli Months, tem that centers In Kentucky, met lings and slaves," and with but few HEAVY PENALTIES PRESCRIBED. ,. .. 1 href Months, " Single Copies. .. J in Louisville last week and formed exceptions, if nny, has ho failed to Specimen copies mailed fi re on application n organization to be known as the denounce our business and interests Correspondent! wanted In all parti ol lb from every stump ho hns mounted Hallway Kniployes' Political Club. ountv. Address na for particulars A strong address was issued to tho in the Stato; yet, in tho faco of this Pertont Who Cmemitnla Driving avisy railroad men of the State and the record of abuse, from the same or Uuylng; OX .'.egro I. Them following ofllcors elected : Frank W. stump whero ho threatens our In THURSDAY. OCTOBER 12. 1899. rrmn llegltterlug or .niic; Will l announces himself ns the Smith, president; Henry McKenney, come, lie the railroad man, and, as Wall la This Charge uf is Unll.il Henry T. Till, friend of first K. II. Mc- evidence of tho fact, promises to second State Judge A Timely stuil UxheustWe recommend a measure prohibiting reGOEBEL'S ONLY HOPE intosh, treasurer; O. II. Toner, Itevlew. cording secretary; J. "W. Toner, tho running of doubo headers. In words, he abuses "hire assistant secretary; Jas. O'Conner, otlior and slaves" from us as slump, United States District Judge Evans, ono corresponding secretary. In addi- Hugs ami from tno next tries to invent an In a recent charge to a Kentucky Jury, Depends Upon His Infamous tion a number of Issuo to securo our support. were chosen, every department of Bill For Success. Why not prohibit the farmer from lucidly laid down the law prescribing every railroad entering Louisville running a four-horteam? Possi punishments for various offenses being represented. The above mentioned club, with bly such a measure would glvo em- meant to protect a ccitaln class of BIB ANXIETY FOB "HOOD" MEN. headquarters in Louisville, and hav-In- ployment to more teamsters, and on Its membershlD list the namos open a market for more wagons and, citizens of the United States in the exof 3.400 employes, at Its first mooting If so, perhaps such a measuro would erclae of the elective franchise. It Is Wlir (ha State) Uoard Delayed Appoint during the present campaign, was gain mm tno support of the wagon polument of County Oommtttlonera In a organized for the purpose of protec- makers and drivers. Prohibit tho clear and to the point y houses It's bulldimr of Those persons who contemplate drivNumber of Counties Altampla to tion and not aggression. high buildings ing away or buying off of negroes to Justify Ilia La it Ilolh Dlehoneat and From tho very ieginningor tno dangerous to work onmeasure present campaign it has apparently and oesides sucn a largo would keep Hypocritical. them from registering or voting, frontage pleased certain candidates and their place on the market a One of the Qoebel organs has pub- supporters to wago a vindictive war of vacant lots which would certainly therefore, need well to take a look at win him the support of the lot ownlished a dispatch from Frankfort In against the business interests that ers and real estate agents. Judge Evans' charge totEi grand jury. we aro engaged in, and to refer to us, which It was stated that the state collectively, in a manner and iu such As wo now see and understand it, It was as follows: board of Goebel commissioners had de- vituperative language as aro calcu- should Mr. Goebel bo made Governor nnd carry out his Intentions "There Is a statute of the United layed appointing county commission- lated to demand resentment. As we are not politicians, in that aud promises, there would likely bo States which prescribes punishments ers in a number of counties in the senso of the word that applies to tho but little use for a double header, for various offenses meant to protect few single headers, aud Eleventh district because they were ofllce seeker, we have not plnced and but speakers on the stump to plead our they being manned by poorly paid a certain class of citizens of the Unitvery anxious to get good men. Good defense nor to represent our cause. crows. ed States in the exercise of the eltctlve supporters that men for what? It is, however, the sense of this club woWo aro told by his Goebel because franchise. Understand, gentlemen. should support In the to The Inference to be drawn from the in order light place ourselves to be tho rail- that In nothing that you do should you proper before the people in he has proven-lilmsel- f Is that the commissioners are general, and also before the other road man's friend by making their permit partisan politics dispatch to have the bonds to get them out of jail, destill working on the hypocritical and railway employes In the State, that fending them lu tho courts, aud by slightest Influence with you. The would bo proper to frame this ad It false pretense by which Mr. Qoebel dress- - to them, as directed by the successfully hnndllug their claims grand jury is meant to bo the most club, and to ask that tho same be agalust the companies for personal independent of all the bodies of men seeks to defend his bill that Kentucky injuries received. Is it possible that charged with the administration of the Just was carried by McKlnley by frauds In givenbegin consideration by all. 'with, we wish to say that we are that class of people who ex- law. It Is your duty, and It is mine, To the Eleventh district. The Commer- this Club was organized solely by pect to get in jail, aud, not having and It should be the pleasure of each friends, liave to call on tho profescial has heretofore published tho fig- the employes; that we individually sional bondsman? Are we to lolnto of us, to administer the law justly, bear the expenses In connection with ures that exposed the lying nature of it, and If any benefits ate derived tho laws, and require the sen ices of fairly and rightly. In no spirit of parattorney to that pretense, but they can not be pub- the credit will be ours, along with a percentage tho courts? pienil our tisanship, in no spirit of oppression, Havo wo but with a spirit guided solely by the our friends who join us, In seeing cases before lished oo often. received injuries without trotting our desire to observe our oaths and dis that our interests get justice. In the whole mate of Kentucky the We would like to say further, as a claims properly adjusted, isn't any charge the duty thereby Imposed upon Republican gain In the vote of 1S96 club and individually, that we have good lawyer just as competent as us; It is my duty to call your attention to handle the case, and over that of 1895 was 20 per cent, never been approached by an owner Mr. Goebel without charging sixty-1- 1 to this statute, as to all others, and to or operatof of tho roads wo work for handle It too while the Democratic gain was 32 per with a demand or request that we vo per cent of the judgment as a explain to you, possibly somewhat "cnt. more at length, because thtsa statutes support any particular party or can feo for samo. In the Eleventh district the Demo- didate lor a political oinco contrary A large portion of his party claim ore not as familiar to the people gen cratic gain In 1S9C over 1S95 was 38 per to our wishes or preference; yet that he broke into tho convention erally as others to explain to you cent., while the Republican gain was some of us have been in the service and stole tho nomination, aud on to some extent what these offenses only 27 per cent In the Third district a great number of years. Neither that account they havo bolted the are. do wo know of. nor have we heard action of his convention; others rethe Democratic gain was 31 per cent, of, any particular employe who has maining as sunnorters claim his "Section 5507, of the statutes of the while the Republican gain was only lost his position, or was threatened shrewdness as displayed In stealing United States, Is in tht3 language: 11 per cent. In the county of Chris- with the loss of it, for supporting or tho nomination proves beyond a "'Every person who, by any unlawtian, which Mr. Goebel cites as one of falling to support any particular doubt that he is an extremely smart ful means, Ltnders, delays, prevents or man, and just such a man as we the counties In which there were party or candidate. obstructs or combines and confederates for Governor. In frauds In favor of the Republicans, the The majority of us regard politics, should have burglar that can other with others to hinder, delay, prevent or enter as practiced by the professional, as words, tho Republicans gained 24 per cent In 1893 your place of business, crack your obstruct any citizen from doing any invention of Imaginary over 1893, while tho Democrats gained an used by the Inventor forissues, to sale anu getaway witii tno goods, act required to be done to qualify him be the sole 30 per cent. The charge that fraud purpose of getting a political job, should at unco he given a loo as to vote, or from voting at any election was perpetrated In these places Is an and so lone as our personal Interests Master Mechanic, because the fact In any state, territory, district, county, offense equally against public decenc) are not vitally assailed we do not has been thoroughly demonstrated city, parish, township, school district, care to get interested, because we that he is a slick article with tools. and common cense. are not seeking positions of that Is It possible that good, reasonable, municipality or other territorial subAs for Louisville, Mr. Goebel charced honorable citizens aro in earnest division, shall be fined not less than taut In the election of 189C, the elec- kind.present we have good, free em when they voice such an endorse 500 or be imprisoned not less than At tion c "fleers were so appointed that at pioyment, wnero we can earn a ment? Are former proud statesmen one month nor more than one year, or ever 40 precincts there was not a sin- plenty fornresent needs, and. bv ex to be displaced altogether by the be punished by both such fine and ImIs all senso of prisonment' gle election officer for Bryan, and thU ercislng a little economy, save up a scheming politician? statement, Mr. Goebel said, "has never portion oi our justly gotten income Justice and fairness to be side "Congress "has not exercised any greedy rush for tracked been questioned by any one." This Is for the future; and out of these earn- political amid this actually seems power in this statute except that of olllco? It are another of the many Inaccuracies of ings we the not required to contrib-to that a moral blight over men's souls enforcing the provisions of the 15th ute to campaign fund, nor which Mr. Goebel has been convicted support a certain candidate or ad- tins fallen like a mildew, aud spread amendment to the constitution of the In this canvass. ministration in order to hold our likcka contagion until nny and all United State. So that this section of and private Interests, would, public Out of the mouth of Mr. Goebel's positions. applies solely to the colored You do not find us in tho Police If possible, bo sacrificed for tho Bake the statute ns own advocate, the Louisville Times, man so far the design of the statute of political preferment. we will show that his charge Is utterly Court on Monday mornings; not one Mr. Goebel offers to bail us out of goes to protect them from any of those, unfounded. In the Issue of August 14, per cent of Our number are or sued for debt, nnd yet Jail, and at the same time threatens thing that are denounced as crimes 189G, In speaking of the appointment threat- by the statutes. You will observe, our merchants here nnd along the to put us In tho poor-houof election officers, that paper says: lino will tell you that we buy rood ens to destroy all corporations, therefore, that this section has refer"The Democrats have been given 'wo articles to wear aud eat, and buy especially the railroads ilrlvo In- ence to the colored man, and this Is a officers In each precinct, and the Re- more ill proportion than do others dustries from the State prevent part of the act known as the civil publicans two. "D" signifies Democat, who aro apparently better able to others from coming reduce our pay -calls us "hirelings" and "slaves," rights bill, designed to carry Into ef"It" Republican, "C" clerk, "J" Judge afford it. Wo support charitable and as an all healing ointment for fect the rights given to him by tho institutions; provide for and "S" sheriff. The politics and 'he and needy; pay our taxes, the poor tlieso bruises ojrers to recommend fifteenth amendment to the constituandhon position are coupled In the appended when we attempt to oxercise the BINdl.K headers. tion of the United States. With this list In th political division Judge freedom of speech, or gather for the Now, wa wish to say to the rail- explanation you will understand that Richie har given tho free silver and purpose of publicly showing our dis- road men of the State, and to our very person who prevents a colored sound money Democrats an equal rep approval of a party or measure that friends at the terminals and along threatens our legitimate prosperity, the line, that wo are opposed to Mr. nun from voting by means of Intimresentation, and In every Instance is we are referred to as "hirelings" ami Goebel, his principles aud his ticket, idation or bribery Is guilty of an ofappointed one sound money and one "slaves," and are told by the poli- not from a party, but from a business fense against the laws of the United free sliver Democrat in each precinct" tician from the Btump that they and moral point of view. The ifmiority of us are country States. Nobody ever pretended that the sympathize with us, because they Statute Is tiroait. election In Louisville in 189S was not know we voto bh our employers dic- raised, anu our families and connec"Now, you will observe, too, that tions aro still residing among you in Mr. Goebel assailed It with his tate. fair till During the present campaign we tho various smaller towns, and on this statute is very broad In its lanIgnorant assertion about election offhavo taken the papers, tried to keep the farms along tho lino and through guage, and I say to you, gentlemen of icers. posted, and will place our support out the State; and our Interests aro How is it now about the districts In where it will at least prevent harm your Interests, because your boys, the Jury, in cities like this and In other which Mr. Pryan got his big vote? In to our Interest to the interest of our your brothers, your relatives and cities of the state of Kentucky where the First district the Democratic business, and the Interest of those your friends aro working right Here registration Is required as an act preon the road with us, and for tlieso cedent to the right to vote, that this 1896 over 1895 was 96 p?r cent, that wo deal with. In As we understand it, the McChord reasons wo believe you will oppose statute would embrace any prevention while tho Republican gain was only 38 any measure or party per cent. In the Second district the railroad measure would permit a the destruction of our that threatens of registration, any hindering or coninterests, and merchant, a farmer and doctor Democratic gain was 83 per cent. In servo as a commission toa assess to consequently tho interest of the trolling of registration by means of the whole 1896 over 189C, while the Republican as In tho present cam- bribery or Intimidation, because, If he State rate to be collected for hauling dees not regUter he can not vote, and gain was only 31 per cent. In thp freight and passengers. These pro- paign. as w o can not see you personally It would be absurd and ludicrous to county of Graves In 1896 Dry an re- fessions aro all the most honorable; position as partly out- hold this statute to rerer merely to the ceived 1,208 votes more than both but, for comparison's sake, couldn't to explain ourwo address you in this day of the election, where he would they, witli equal grounds for justness lined abovo, Hradlfy and Hardin got In 1895. manner, trusting that you will join nnd fitness, appoint a Mr. Goebel's attempt to justify his railroad men to assesscommission of us in thwarting tho designs of this be doprlved of voting, not by intimidathe value of law by alleging Republican frauds In calico, liny or to prescribe at the aggregation of political tricksters tion or the use of money, but by the not registered, fact 1896 Is dishonest and hypocritical. It bedsldo of the sick? While that and wreckers known as tho Goebel yet tothat he had did not apply to and say that It the can not be excused as Ignorant Lou- commission would, no doubt, be ticket. TR.1l. MoIntosu, i registration itself. So that I Instruct composed of the most honorable citiisville Commercial. J Com. G. P. Dkmutu you that It Is an offense against tht zens to be found, is it reasonable to ( GkO. IlKPK.VEIt. From K.mr Dollar to Tw.lm Dollar. suppose that they would be as capalaws of the United States for any man, Kelley Lee, an Industrious farmer of ble of handling the intricate, duties or set of men, by means of bribery or of regulating traitlc as would the Allen county, sold a calf during CleveGood News for Our Readers. Intimidation, to prevent, hinder or conland's administration for M- - The same experienced Traillc Manager, who has finally reached his responsible Who havo scrofula taints In their trol any colored man In registering as cow had another calf, no better In any position after years of experience in blood, and who has not? Scrofula thsTprellmlnary to voting nt the elecrespect, and no older when sold. But tho different departments of traflle? in all its rutins is cured by Hood's tion. tho last calf brought Mr. Lee $12 un- Could bucIi a commission. Inexperi toarsapariiiawnicii thoroughly puri"And I will say to you further that McKlnley's admlnstratlon. In this enced In such matters, figure on the fies the blood. This disease, which this statute does not apply to congresder costs, actual mid prospective, of frequently appears iu children, Is sional elections nor to presidential case Republican prices are just three to one better than Democratic prices. building, maintaining and operating greatly to bo dreaded. It is most elections only. It applies to all eleclikely This Is only one reason among a mil- a railroad, including the costs, actual which to affect tho glands of neck, tions In which the colored man has tho and prospective, of petty prosecu become enlarged, eruptions lion others why the people should jfote tion anu persecuiio.n ; and ue auio to appear on the head aud face, and the right to vote. It was enacted for tho Republican ticket The Democratic snv. with niiv dnrrrea of aemirnev. oyesare frequently affected. Upon purpose of guaranteeing to the colored the leaders say that their party is great on fairness, justice or knowledge, what Its first appearance, perhaps in slight man the right that the people had glv-i- n fighting; they even fight each other. rate oi ireignt ino road Biiouiu cnarge eruptions or pimples, scrofula should him under the fifteenth amendment That's true, but all fighting la destruc- for hauling a ton of bay from Vine be entirely eradicated from the sys- 10 the constitution or the United tem by a thorough courso of Hood's Mates. Grove to Louisville? tive. We don't want to be destroyed; Tills measure, If ndopted, would Sarsapnrllla to prevent all the painwe want to build up. be placing the railroads of Kentucky ful nnd sickening consequouces of "And we must look Into this quesUod'a Fuiora. in the hands of three running hcrofula sores which drain tion, gentlemen of the jury, from a God multiplies His favors. Day by firactlcally commissioners, nnd tho system, sap the strength and broader standpoint than any to which day and hour by hour they come troop- isn't it fair to conjecture that (while mako existence utterly wretched. I have averted. ing along ncccrdlng to existing need. no doubt unintentionally) lu ordor "It Is fortunate, possibly, certainly It So continuous and opportune- are mer- to keen out of the hands of the Re Is not that roads would bo compelled as Mr. Itryan is a very veisatlle man, court a misfortune, power.the federal cies and bounties that we too often ceiver, the every ono knows. When wheat has this much It Is no tosses; long as take them as matter of course, at- to meet tneso buying nnu so engines. goes down, fieo Bllvor Is preached, calamity to the country, nor to the they their tribute them to secondary causes and cars, aro now when wheat goes up the trusts are liberties of the people, that as many rails, ties, ami other fail to trace them, with duo Intelli- as cheap as the market supplies attacked. Ho has Ills oratorlnl trap posslblo havo jurisdiction to gence and gratitude to their divine would there bo any means affords, so set that he can take advantage of courts as of off punish offense against the elective tource Novcr onght the Hand that setting this lcs3 lu any wny, other the prices both falling and rising. ftanchlse, for the reason that the govfeeds us and tho Heart which responds than by getting cheaper men to work Tho advance iu tho price of meat will give him a great opportunity to ernment of tho United States or the iu love, sympathy and kindness, bo lor tneniv Now, if our income Is reduced, harp on the poor man's Roup bone. governments of the states and. all the forgotten or unacknowledged. Goodness Grayson Kngle. governments of our municipalities, are will we not havo to make reductions ever deserves recognition. Presbyterto correspond? based at last upon the free expression Won't wo have to ian wear cheaper ciotnes and more of the will of the people through the It flay Save Your Life. patches? Won't we havo to pay our Education. or twoof Foley's Honey and ballot, and any machinery that may be A dose Education is uotmero leamingor tho landlord less house rent ormovo into rents cheaper? Won't we Tar will prevont an attack of pneu- provided anywhere that can materially ncqnisitiou of knowledge tho acquisi- ono that get of milk from the monia, irrlp orsevero cold If taken In asslstorald la tho prevention of crimes a pint tion of a treasure to be laid up in tho havo to instead of getting a quart? time. Cures coughs, colds, croup, against tho ballot box, that can matermind and to remain there without liv- milkman bill with tho butcher and lagrlppo, hoarseness, dlllleultbreath-lug- , ially aid In a free, fair and full exWill our ing energy Education is the cultiva- grocer bo as largo as now? In other wnooping cough, Incipient con- pression of tho will of the people la tion nnd development of thinking raw- words, u our purcuasing power ib sumption, asthma or bronchitis. usefuland beneficial to the public, not er, and a man who has not secured for reduced, will It not in turn effect the Givos positive relief In advanced for the purpose of Oppressing any one, himself this has so far wasted the years business of every Boul that we trado stages of consumption, asthma or "" bronchitis. Guaranteed. Campbell not for the purpose of depriving any I tit, to that extent? of Ills education. From "Thoughts of man of the right of suffrage, not for For these reasons, If for no other, & Co. . and For the Inner Life," u Volume of the purpose of influencing any man to Sermons by Dvvight of we are, "ad a club aud Individually. opposed to the McChord Itailroad Subscilhe for Thk Hre, $1 perl vote any other way than as he pleases, Yale. Jnst Published. VK Law. year. but simply to protect him in doing CbelllBee - TOE PRESENT ' su 1 Ki vlce-prosldo- vice-preside- ts se er two-stor- what he desires to do as a voter, to give him the right to vote as he pleases, and to punish any man who, by means of Intimidation or bribery, prevents him from voting as he pleases. "So that whatever othersrcay do. It Is the duty of those charged-witthe enforcement of the law to look to the law as it Is, and to se that those who are guaranteed protection by the law, should have l", and that those who violate the law are punished. "With the punishment alone havo we anything to do. The government of tho United States can not Interfere and docs not by these statutes In the slightest degree Interfere with the conduct of any election. Tho elections all over our state our conducted under tho laws of the stato exclusively, and no officer of the United States has the least right to Interfere with tho elecAll that these tion or Its progresses. sections of the statute do, and the next section to which I shall call your attention, is to provide punishment against evildoers If they violate the laws of the United States. "These laws, like all other laws, are to operate upon acts that have been dons and to restrain the doing of criminal sets by the fear of the enforcement of the laws, and whenever the laws of the United States shall be systematically disregarded because the men charged with the execution of these laws violate their oaths and do not enforce them, It will be a sad day for the government The government of the United States Is to bo perpetuated. If at all, by an honest, vigilant enforcement of the laws that congress makes for the protection of the people. Further Felonies. "There are one or two other sections to which I shall call your attention In the same connection: Section 6508 'If two or more oppress, conspire to Injure, peri-son- s threaten or Intimidate any citizen In the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by the constitution or laws of the United States, Or because of his having so exercised the same; or It two or more persons go In disguise on the highway, or on the premises of another, with Intent to prevent or hinder his free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege so secured, they Bhall be fined not more than $5,000 and Imprisoned not more than ten years, and shall moreover, bo thereafter Ineligible to any office or place of honor, profit or trust created by the constitution or laws of tho United States.' "Furthermore, there Is quite an important section, E509, which provides that it In the act of violating any provision in either of the two preceding sections any further felony or misdemeanor be committed, the offender shall be nunlshed for the same with such punishment as Is attached to such felony or misdemeanor by the laws of the state In which the offense Is committed. "And, gentlemen, let me say in reference to tbli statute that the period of limitation that bars a prosecution of a crimo is three years. So that If within three years last past you find anyone guilty of any of these offenses, or any of the others to which I shall allude, they are subject to Indictment It you think there is reasonable ground for their conviction. "Now it Is an offense against the laws of the United States to conspire to do anything to which I have alluded under tho other section and the conspiracy must be engaged In by two or more persons before It Is a conspiracy. gar-nlshe- ed se "I have known and so have you heard of many Instances where there was a conspiracy by means of which persons were prevented from exercising the right of suffrage by means ot bribery. Tor example, 1 take It, If you were to find anywhere that 10 or 15 or 100 ot these colored men had been, by means of bribery, Induced to go Into a bouse for the purpose of being 'kept from voting, that would bo conspiracy, If engaged In by one or more persons. If nny of these things nre done by mere persuasion It is no offenso against the laws of the United States. A can persuadu U to do this by any means except to bribe or Intimidate him. and those things are entirely within tho liberties of the people If done by This is what we endeavor o do, to pcrsuado our fellow citizens '. go with ua on these questions. Thers Is no offense here. The offense consists la doing such things by means of bribery and Intimidation." The Uiinuoniirss of Childhood. Children are single minded an deim-pi- e Tho ingenuousness of childhood is o ono of Its charms. Insincerity and nre foreign to tho child, and IU life is a transparent one. In this respect we all need to become as little children. The shams with which our life is filled shonld be ilnng nwoy The deceptions of foolisluprldtrehoold be dropped, and we shonld live one with another in the simplicity of childhood Only thus may we Enow the happiness that belongs to none bnt the absolutely honest Evan-relipro-lentst Depend tsn Clirlat. Ilockou ou Christ to do His pari Directly you glvo, Ho takes. Directly you will opeu tho door, Ho enters. Directly you will opon tho floodgates. Ha pours iu a glorious tido ot fullness fullness of wealth, ot power, ot joy, Tho clay has only to be plastlo to tho hand of a Palfssy, tho mat bio has only to bo pliant to the chisel of a Mlohael Angelo, tho organ haronly to bo responsive to the slightest tonoh of a Handel, tho student has only to follow tho least hint ot a Faraduy or a Who-weand there will bo no failure in fofiult. Oh, to bo equally susceptible to the moldiug influences of Christ I We shall not fall In realizing tho highest Ideal of which wo are capable if only wo will let Hlui do His work uiihtnder ed. Rev. F. B. Meyer. ll Q. W. Stovons,tho war correspondent who bocamo famous for his dramatic narratlvo of Kltchouer's cami 'Waaulnglou unit fie Helurna paign to Khartoum, In a Brian Dlaeonraiclnir Nesva to Mr. Without Doing Violence to thoughtful article In shows.October the Cleveland tpais tho IolttlcI SUn- number of Harper's Magazine, Sacred Obligations. tho debasing eilect of the Dreyfus alTnlr on 1 ranee. An artlclo by Copyright, 1SS9, by American Press AssoOUE DUTT 1H THB PH LIPPINE8. Hon. John Uarrott, lato United ciation. States Minister to Slam, and for ten Farm, w'icn is next tu months war correspondent at MaGnovjjn Cieveiamo's, in Tnc stait nila, elves Inaargent Claim In Liiiui Conflict tlon of the an admlrnliln ronrnsnnfa. cv Noo asnsEir. character and personality With Arllel.a .r the l'ee Trsuly, of Admiral Dewoy. Sir Martin ConTu tho Edltur: ss Document WhloH n lllmta Vd After cucouaterin so many setbacks tu way, tho greatest mountain climber Dlralcratlc harmuny, and heerln no end rerlalis Dut.rs l:.,ult .Mii.t it In the world, opens the number with uv bad noozo from .pTcry pint ur tho tho story of his ascontof Illlmanla, Crashed. kumpass, doorln ml stay In Washono of tho highest ami most Inaccesington, I her returned home fcr a brcef Not unles3 the United States wcro sible peaks of the Bolivian Andes. kansultashun with Mr. Cleveland befoar capable ot tho betrayal ot tucici Part S6conU bf "Tho First Amorlcan : I go abroad agin Intu territory outside uv ccu'.d It recognize tho Insur- Ills Homos and Ills Households," Nod Gersey tu drum up rccroots. Wen I by Lolla Herbert, gives an interestsot down and realized how be hod auacht gent claims In Luzon, Tha constant ing description of AVashhiglon'fl life me frum laber nnd sot me ndrlft amung repetition cf tho Tagat dtinard that In Now strangers with mora munny In ml pocket wo shall ackowlrdgo their gii'Qrnmcnt seat of York, when tho city was tho tho than I bed ever seen thare befoar J felt Is simply ridiculous. Wo wcie, at war Julian ltalph, national government. under tho title "Toutthct It wood be baso lugratltood not tu with Spain and settled It by treaty. ing on Two Sens," describes a call upon him and let him sharo tho tho famous 1. and O. thct hed fallen ontu me. I That document binds us to perform from seen his shudder on tbo barn doro cs I certain duties. One provision Is that steamerstories Kuglaml to Calcutta. aro contributed by npproacht hU premlslt, and found tho the civil rtghts and political status of Short MacMalaiH, I. Zangwlll, grate man engaged In settin n hen, the native Inhabitants of the territory-cede- SAiUiasIiartwell Cnthorwood, nnd Mnfy nlch seemed tu bo wobblln around to tho United States shall be Sti I'lteti Claim. tu much tu soot Mr. Cleveland's peccc-fby cougress. The presiTho largest Issuo uf Harper's UeeS. Tho old hen was walkln and determined dent can nut act beyond this limita- Wuekly over published Is tho Dewoy llclln and cacklln In a belligerent ownand faled tu appreshUte her tion. Con&rcsa has yet to meet and Memorial Number, ready September s er's pacific lntemhuns jest pi sum tako up tho subject. Article 9 ot tho a8th. Between Its ornamental covhey- duu wenerer hU name It treaty guarantees that Spanish sub- ers, printed lu colors, nre fifty-si- x UefOar I rood gtt a chance tu to jects may remain In tho Islands and pages, duvotod almost entirely tho Admiral Ooorgo Duvvey and sa CBuytblu, Mr. 'Cleveland kommenced enjoy the rights of other foreigners. eventful incidents In his career. For to talk tu tho objeck uv hits soHcitood and Article 10 Is a plcdgo for the liitcrestliigand authoritative articles onlmrdcficd hU solo tu her ez If she hed bin a dolegatu tu a notnlaatln convent-shu- free exercise of religion, artlclo and flno drawings this Dewey numy "Yu air a toomnltuous and 11 guarantees Spanish rights In tho ber Is perhaps unprecedented In tho old kuax," scd he, "but I klnnot afIllustrated periodicals. courts, article 13 protects Spanish annnls of Kipling Hutlynrtl ford tn bev yu feci cuny annlmotlty agin contributes a tue. Vu noed Lonclllation. Yu air Jest copyrights, and artlclo 15 agrees that poem, his most striking work slnco like tho Dltnlcrotle party ez constitooted for 10 years Spanish merchant vessels his Illness, ajiMiroprlately entitled nt the present time. Yu her tu mutch In Philippine ports shall have tho "Let t's Now Praise Famous Men." Gtln blud In yura constltoosbuu and not same privileges as American ships. A history of tho Dewoy family and euuft Judgment tu bak It up. Yu nlr Recognition of thoTagal government n sketch of the Admiral's life Is conIn fcr trubble In every dlreckshuu hunt tributed by tho Hon. John Barrett, and likely tu find It It yu keep on huntlu would be a repudiation of the treaty, lato Unltod States Minister to Shun, fer It. Yu cwh! sum strong man like me, and before the meeting ot cougress at an Intimate friend of tho Admiral, for Initnui-o- , who rood seczo ju with a at that It would be an announcement aud closely associated with him for mailed Bnnd and hold yu la check wile to Spain that our treaty pledges would ten mouths at Manila. Throughout U get rid uv the fltln fever thet seems be deliberately violated. Such a courso this period Mr. Barrett kept careful tu oubalance ju. Iu yuro prcscut frnlm would give Spain a weighty grievance notes of everything of material Inur inind there It no tellln vtbut further terest, nnd consequently his artlclo delooshuu may inter yuro bed, nor how against tho United States, and one In contains a mass of entirely new Insoon ju nlll run up ngtu sum bigger bird whose presence we could only hang formation 011 upon these thet klu Ilk the stiifUn out ur )u. Thnro our heads In shame, for no honorablo subject. Tho number contains lx tho saltu oucortnlnty ez tu how yu will response could bo made. Tho Tagat also an Imimrtaut article on the art nftor yu tit quieted down and git revolt must be crushed or our good United States Navy, by Henry Intu tho Incoobatln blxncs. AVhut kind I.00111I Nelson, and special articles av a platform bird I mean air yu goin faith In framing treaties with the ac- on Dewey ond Manila campaign, Iyu golnfu hatch out knowledged powerswlll stand Irrepar- llustrated with many hitherto untu hntcn out! Air wuu with golden plumage, or wun with ably broken down. When the Tagals published portraits and with superb silver tether, or wun with no culler nt present themselves with a Dag of truce drawing of naval homes. It Is a all? l'erhnp yu will lacoobate a scarenumber thnt Is not only worth readcrow with a nigger outfit M wlch tu ncnro requesting that this country admit ing but worth preserving. The issue sumbuddy thet Is easily scared jest cs their Independence, they might be for October 7th will describe Adtho ltepubllklns ur Baltimore wuz bl our handed a copy of the treaty with miral Dewey's reception lit Now folks at the city elecahun In May. Oh Spain as a tufllclcnt and unanswerYork, anil tno succeeding uuinbur thet I cood Ink A a peep Into futoorlty and able reply. The Tagal proposition Is w 111 be given over to the story of tho find cut svhut Is abed ur ui!" an Insult as well ni a challenge, and contest for tho America's cup. FlniUn ml benefactor In such a meditn-li- v Tho special fashion number of mood, and Intflucd tu lie despondent. should get no further hereafter than Harper' Bazar, published October It made me downcast, mlaelf, wen I re- an outpost 7th, contains a comprehensive and membered thet I brought no tldlns CAN THIS BE TRUE? authoritative presentation of auu cheer tbo hart uv nny Dlral-rn- t tumn and winter fashions. The hoo huncered and thirsted fer oBls. A SI. at rut Unearthed at number is elaborately Illustrated, liiaiarllr So Jest ex he wuz about tu i?soom his Ciivlnntnii. mid give full descriptions of the conrcrtashun with tho ben In regard tu The most diabolical plot ever laid reception gowns, outing continues, pollttka! ckonomy, I rttidit up tu him and o frantlkally embrnlst him amidships ex rerun apolitical campaign has been un capes, wraps, house gowns, anil costumes willed will be worn cz I cood reach, earthed in Covington. It was nothing "What noozo from tho battlefield." sed less than a scheme to Inveigle W. J. during tho coming autiiui ami winof new and ter. The largo he, ez bo gently ontangled me frum hlx Uryan Into the state and have him original fashlon-hlnt- number s niiiko this arras. rotten-egge- d on his first appearance invaluable to every woman. "The nooxo Is all wun wa, and all agin us, Mr. Pretident," sod I, "wether yu on a platform to speak. Devilish aa The Author el In III Slips" look at It irum a military or a politlka! the plot Is, trusty Goebsl men have tho The standpoint The FUlipecn hcetben hev bceu delegated to carry It out with famousauthor of 'In His Steps,"over religious book, of which not cum up tu our cxpuctashuns In the,hope that such an outrage, being three million copies have now been tho Amerlkla armies, and tbo Brysold, ban been Induced to answer. In an Insurgents are gittln tu numerus and charged against the Drown Democrats, an article which ho has sent to The sassy fer onr rumfort. Tho ltepubllklns will cause a stampede to Ooebel. To Ladles' Home Journal, the air gittln all the party glory out ur tba such straits hare the floebelttes been which unconsciously comesquestion to the war tha wux forct iutu, and thare dont reduced, they aro willing to humiliate mind after reading his lunik: "Is sorm tu he nothln left fer us tu du but Bryan that Qoebel may be benefited. this plan practicable in our present tu set down on our haunches and growl. Mr. Sheldon does dally "Uv whut good lx enny kind uv a heeUi-en- , Details ot the dastardly scheme are evade life?"question, but answer not It tho I'd like tu kno. If wa kant yooxa him meager, but enough has been learned iu u direct and vigorous manner, aud fer tho benefit ur tho Dlmlcratic par- to fix the plot upon the henchmen ot tells exactly what ho believes would ty," xed Mr. Cleveland. "I wuz opposed Ooebel, Such tactics will meet with bo tho 111001 of his plan upon modtu the war and still am opposed tu all condemnation from all honest Demoern business methods and present-da- y kinds ur strlfo thct will benefit the hoclal life. party, but If yu kin sho me cuny crats, as It Is well known that the real assortment ur hcetben. cnay whero, wlch Democrats are friends ot Bryan and Tho present generation Is only now wa kin ketch ontu and rope em Intu our would not stoop to such diabolical coming to understand the- meaning owu ranks I kin bu depended upon tu ex- work. of the word "work." It applies to tend a frendly wclcomo to em If tba will The whole plot Is Intended to Injure nil classos, rich and poor alike, and promise tu be faithful tu the civil tervl Perkins the iirown ticket and crcato sympathy .Mr. Charlotte. make thisStetsonlu has and rereuoo reform." undertaken to clear her "Uxcuso me, Mr. President," scd 1, for Ooebel. Mr. Bryan's real friends artlclo, "What Work Is," which ap"but thet lx exactly whut I hev hed tu are anxious that he shall 10 Informed pear lu tho October "Cosmopolcontend sgtntt la Washington wharo yu of tho kind of reception prepared for itan." scut mo tu harmouUo so raenny different him by his pretended friends, and Under tho tlllo or "Christian a tuples' uv Dimlcrats. One and nil of warned against his becoming an inno- Science anil tho book of Mrs. Kdtly," em sod thet civil strvl aud rereuoo reparty to such a plot Mark Twain contributes to tho form wux plods out, and tbet wn coodn't cent "Cosmopolitan" what I tho It will bo remembered that In 1898 win In 1000 bl hanglu lire men ontu ded tattoos, nor by hanging lire lasoos ontu John O. Carlisle was rotten-egge- d at most ronmrknblo If magazine artlclo di-ijj,t of tho year. men. Ws must net sumthln noo nnd Covington. This piece of "littleness" of tho mouth, startlln, and smuthlu tbet wont bo tu was carried out by the same gang ot Twain discloses two phases of lilmself tho humorist and tho keen, suggestlr uv a graveyard. The philosopher. He handle opinyun wux tbet we alreddy her on baud Ooebel I tea who would now humiliate tu menny unburied corpses tioo air walkln Bryan In order to citato sympathy for tho cult a bit Huverely, perhaps, but ho has his reasons for so doing nnd around aud inaklu belloro tha air olive." their d and master. s sets thorn forth most forcibly. Ills That lx wharo they air all rone." said ttMine eruestly. "We dont want ftnlus; by Sir. Ilryan. statement concerning Mrs. F.ddy's Mr. Cloytland From 1873 to 1892 tho list ot protect- book I characteristic. Of it he says notbln noo. Wo mast roller la tbo footsteps ur our fourfnthor and belicvo in ed Items or articles contained four "Ills tho first time slnco tho dawn wbuteTcr tba scd we ort to believe lu wen thousand names and the average pro- of Creation thnt a Voice has goiio we got tu It. We air alwaio sboor uv a tective duty under the McKlnley law crashing through space with such o placid aud complacent confidence man boo still 'thinks he Is rotin fcr Jackson wcu bu totes fer me, but was 60 per cent. In his speech In Chi- and command." placed ontu cago denouncing trusts Mr. Bryan thare lx no dependence tu be a man thet goes huntln uround fer noo ssld: "Another thing that, to my Judg Issoos aud noo candidates. Tbo Dlml- ment, has aided monopolies Is a high cratic party kin nevef hope tu cum Inter tariff. No one can dispute that a tariff power aglu If It makes Intelligence a test, law, an Impost duty, enables the trust or tries tu compeet with the ltepubllklns Onr to charge for Its pVoduct the price of a lo keepln abrext ur the tlaet. strougest bold lx tu Ignore ex far ez pos- slmtlarforelgn product plus the tariff." .SSSSSSSSSSSSBSSSK tu pasaln events, god There Is nothing new about this. On sible git back and flto agin nigger supremacy, the contrary, It is a piece ot old folly, and the danger we nlr all liable tu of a mere theory or assertion exploded hevin sum nigger marry our daughters. long since. Tho Courier-Journonco ', Wo won 'the fits in Ilaltimoro bl sich and we klu conduct a cainpnne along proved In the most conclusive manner that the theory Is unsound, ns follows: slcb lines w It h uiarvellus euthooslattn.' "Wo cood du It so far cz yu and I air "Since 1873 there was a reduction In conserncd, Mr. President," sed I, "aud the commodities which farmers bare to we cood'eazUy Indooco the Dimlcrats uv buy; sugar fell 60 per cent; nails, C2; Noo (Jersey to swaller wbutever wuz sot Iron, 67; steel rails, 75; Tllo corteee, befoar cm, but thare seems tu bo sum bar yung men In our party In other ttalts boo 11; tea, 73; sheeting, 48; drilling, 65, want tu look abed and not fito the bat- shirting, 45; standard prints, 47;'prlnt NtPv j .SEm &J$m 3Lu1a3 tles uv ,thelr grandfathers. Applejack cloths, 56; quinine, 89; glasj goblets, AJLALBBulEsajSsaBBi Sksa? dont seem tu reach their cases at all, and 70; 10 by 14 window glass, 50; underI am of ratio tbet we she! loozo their shirts, 66; ginghams, 64; carpets, 66; rotes aud their Inllooeuce. I bev appecled pepper, 52; molasses, 63. Tho average tu them lo wato fer kalamlty tu cum, and tha skotnfully rcpllde thet tha preferred decrease In price under tha highest tariff ever known Is 65.4 per cent." prosperity." Hero Is a difference between Mr. Then thnro Is but little hope fer them," scd Mr. Cleveland. "A Dlmlcrat Bryan nnd the Courier-Journof 105.4 hoo klnnot wate fer kalamlty In these per cent, which literally crushes Mr. dUbenrtcnlti times iz no troo Dlmlcrat." Bryan's charge that "the tariff law, on Impost duty, enables a trust to charge for its product the price of a similar foreign product plus the tariff " rt-ouAn-ixiACI'.r-fniul nttl-loo- d, Dltnl-crntmen-sbunekon-trnrd nog-llgcis-si- tu in Oo-tob- er far-sight- ed Im-..iiAn-dro- MR. EPIZOOT WILKINS. WE CAN'T TURN BACK Literary Notes. , , I I n i GROVE I al tnc-lies- TASTELESS al tf)u:zot!jit.kuij Li H I ISJS u ' the Eugene Field Mon-timt.sourenlr fund Subscribe any amount desired. Subscriptions A as low as It oo will (o this daintily artistic volume FISJLD FLOWIRB The Hook t,f ilia zti, at century handtome-I- v cloth to in ',8acbserlp-tlontofuii.- a (Mutinied by certificate of Hook con thirty two of the ot World's Grratctt tains a .election most HsM'l le I and Artists. EUGENE Given pfee person InterFIELD'S to each subscribing la ested la POEMS.. $7.00 BOOK. MAS NATURE WARNED YOU Nature herself clad In the early garb ot iprluir, uloeaomafortb tree aud flowers caualu. the deeuoudent. chord to vibrato to tula, the moat dellifbtfui of all, eprlnittlm and- how do , you feel Have you thai tired (baky- feeling-live forerunuerof ChUlt, Malaria and Typhoid t'erer If to, 70a matt not pat thU warning-an Indication of tlckae; avoid thlt It consult tu as our advice cost you nothing. and procara tv bottle ol Call ua your Dr. Carfatedt's German; Liver Powder. Take on do a day at Led lima for l daytj then Jollowbr procuring-- a, bottle of Yucatan Chill Toalc. following- the direction and alter two week1 court of thet two great remedies, ttob will feel Ilk the Cower look la th spring. Prepare yenraelf for the malarial or hot aeaton when th atmosphere la fall ot germs. If accessary and nueu yoar aretem warn yoa. repeat the above. These Kemedle Is Hoc tad sold by 1 drag-gis- t - Dewey's Adaptability to Clr urn-stanc- es. TDNIC AS COOP FOR ADULTS. aAti.Tii,!txs,.Nov.i,iMa. LL WARRANTED. Admiral Dewey 1h a remarkable Illustration of the 'adaptability of men of our race to tho conditions and circumstances that unexpected ly surround and meet them. He, BIIUVVH PRICE 60 ots. Modtctne Co., tu. l.oui. Mo. ueouemon: ive eniu Tear, ouu uouie a aiUJVK-C1IIL TAtrTKUOi 0NIO and bav bought three arose already thla year. In alt ayrei rart St. Itornaril Drug Store. ana is reauy jor ueiivery. uui ur sue nonte contribution of the world'a creates! artists this book could not have been manufactured for let! than 17 do. The Fund created la divided equally between the family ot f be lata I'.ugene Field and the Fund for tho buildlnz of a monument lo the memory of the beloved poet of childhood. Addreis Eagene Field Monument Souvenir Fund, ISO Monroe St., Chicago. Alco at Book Stores If you also wish lo send postage, enclose loc, Heotlon Uai, at adv. It Inserted The a our contribution. . . ,,,,,1 reoictrnlstive work a per day. T. C. IUtttle Is ondeavorlntj to a stock company for tho erection of a canning fnetory at Ovvenn-bor- o with capacity for 40,000 oaiiB ..,. Subscribe for The Uhe. flood for the Children. Mm. J31a HIiihou, of Illnton, Ala., writes us August 12, 1898. "I advise all inotliers to glvo tholr children l'laiuer'B Nubian Tea when they are fiuny or fretful, I keep this medlclno house and when tho children are ailing I gtvo them a doso and that is tno last 01 it." uoui oy Bt.ueraaru Drugstore. lliu iitjiiuv ui uui loiiuura m copo successfully with new nnd broad responsibilities. Hut with thn natural tendency of his American blood and training, and tho Inspiration which ho recolvcd from birth nnd early childhood in Vermont, there are certain indispensable Intent qualltlosBuch ns consummato leadership, exeoutlvo capacity, strength of coiivictlon which woro only brought out by tho Manila, and tho cares that battle of preceded and followed that engagement. Long boforo, to his large olrclo Qf friends in naval, political aud business circles, ho had shown qualities of urbanity, discrimination which, put to and their full test in tho Manila cam equal to tho emer paign, proved gency. lion, joint jiarruu in jumper's Magazine. o, pcrwnca of It lu the drug buslnete, havt Dover sold an article that save aueh universal aatu Youra truly. laetlou a juur Tonic. er, Asxxr.ainB acu YEARS' OO ta EXPERIENOE aiejsjgBieaegiM DraiQNB tFBBBBBra'S. ;ii COPVRI4rfY eke. AnvoMi tenjUptT sketch and deaerlpUea nay rntcair asrertam our opinion tree wtHAtier aa Invention It probably rwtentable. Comteuiilea. Handbook on Pateettl tlont strtdlr conOdentlaL trt rutvf trAnrvr :aai.. tonirroa. uiuet Kpistiati hit inn 4W reeelv ltf etntai fulrjtn atTiatewcn .1.(1.. sillliAnl TftADtHArWS .it !..,. Scientific A . culation of an? tHentlfto jMtrael, Hraueh OSiee, JtacrkM. handaomelr Illustrated wecklr. lia Tjirireet cirTerms. IS a hUNH&CoiBriiBwYork 05 If Bt, Washington, 1VC ' br. M. A. Simmons Liver Medlclno Quickens tba Appetite, Aldt Dlztttlon, glvet Tonic and Vigor to all the functions, and forllBetlbt tyt-ititlnit Epidemic Infiutncri. Are you a subscriber to Tuk BhkY You should bo. Jtfeun&ijLi. CS "i-t- ,ustfHhKjk Public Library. Haley, woro at Madlsonvllle Monday attending: tho funoral of Mr. D. A. Morton, and returned homo Tuesday morning. Tho Karllngton Froo Library has beon glvon a thorough going ovor and everything stralgiitoned,clonnod and put (o rights, the hooks bolng Tho curios in nicely tho very Interesting museum at tho "J3u 3nbustru toe Hffrlpe." library havo also been cleaned, rearranged nnd put In attractive shape. Several now books and a now collecLOCAL HfeW'S. tion of bound volumes of magazines havo been added and In a short time quite a numbor of now volumes aro bo put In. Tho 1 iijo for reading Tho MndlsonvlllB band Is making to drawing near and uio library Is in Is inuBlc fur tlio Henderson fair this good condition for tlrat time. It Is week. opened nt 2 p. in, ovory day oxcopt 8:!10 remains open Mr. and Mrs. 11. M. Salmon, of Sunday and In tho uvonliig. until Kvory-bod- y or 0 o'clock 1 SUDDEN DEATH. Grasshoppers. Owonsboro had a mysterious visitation of grassboppors tho othor day. Tho Mossonger says:, "In some sections of tho city Thursday morning there wero thousands of big grasshoppers. Numbers of them were on tue sidewalks and they would hop Into tho stores and other places of buslnoss. They were to bo seen in greater numbers on the loveo than anywhere else. Thoy were so numerous that thoy would strike a pedestrian on tho river front, in tho faco, and it made walking disagreeable Thoy would remain motionless on tho ground or walks, and would not movo oxcopt as a person or conveyance would pass along over them. Many of them wero dead, and thoso that wero still nolo to jump appeared to bo In rather half-wa- y living con- David A. riorton Stricken With Appoplexy at Home. QREAT SHOCKTO COflMUNlTY. Red Hill Notes. Maklnc sonrhum is the order of tho day around Rod Hill. JMlon Yountr. of Wvnns was In Louisvlllo last week buying goods. Congressman Botkin's The Quiet of a Sabbath Turned to Mourning. Dnvo Morton is dead. Tho news shocked the people of tho entire county, throughout whose length nnu ureaiuit nearjy overy man wns his friond. That a man of such cood health. In tho full nort- sosslon of alt his faculties, nt tholr nigiicst development: a man so closely Identified In a personal, frlondly and buslnoHS way with the peoplo of Hopkins county that ho should be strickon down In tho (lower of his manhood, shook many a strong mnn's uorvos, wronciicu tnoir Hearts and brought tears to their oyos. jjoain occurrou niiout noon Buiuiav and Is attributed to apoplexy. Ho had at tlmos felt tho warnings of nu nt Ottle Davis, au entorprisiiur to bacco merchant, of White Plains, is building a dwelling houso. Joe Gibson, of Nortonvllle. mado a WAsmxOTOtf, 1, business trip to Red Hill Inst week. Dr. S. B. Hartiiuvt, D.C., April O, 1808. Columbus, Bud Stanley mnde a business trip Mr Dkak Docron: It glyei tno to Red Hill last week. plcasura to certify to tho excellent Bud Stanley mado a business trip curative qualities of your medicines: to Karllngton last Thursday. C. M. Grace of this cltv. was in Statement Is wolcomo. Wonderful Discovery. ! IiUKHFOiti), Al.A., April 15, 1803. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Davis, Mrs. New Si'knohu Mkimuimi Co. L. J. Shaw and F. 11. If arris, of MorDear Sits: I havo been troubled tons Gap went to Evansvllle Tuos-dn- y with Idvor and stomach complaint. to attend tho ltounlon and boo I had no nppotlto and my general tho l'rosldeut. health was very bad. I look medicine from four different doctors nnd All tho carpenters, brick masons, thoy failed to do mo any good. I got began to uso your painters, and lnnchanlcs generally no relief until Iused nbout two doluru busy as osslblo for all tho hours Nubian Tea. I a day thoy want to work, and tho lars worth of It, and It did mo more good than nil tho inedfuluo I ovor rush continues. took. I havo gained thlrty-flv- o and formorly pouunds In weightsleep my health Is Will Cornrt and mother, soundly nnd good. 1 can of this place, but who have been re- very appetlto Is excellent. I can recmy siding in Nnshvlllo a fuw mouths, ommend Planter's Nubian Tea to tho havo returned and will ngaln make world as being a God-son- d to any Earllnglou tholr home. community. Any nun who doubts this statement can write to Mrs. 1'. J. HorbV residence on Okoak llAKI.ll. avenue is going up rapidly. It Sold by St. Bernard Drugstoro. y is to bo nil eight-roohouse, mill when comploted will bo Amputated a Leg. one of tho prettiest In Karllngton. On Monday morning Doctors Chat-to- n and Long, assisted by Dr. W. I. Mr. Duvo Houlihan Ih having nu his residence on Ross, of Madlsonvllle, amputated addition built Fnrreu avenue, and when Huished tho leg of Tom Smith, which wns Inwill present thoappearrnco of a now jured in his lean from a fourth story house. Mr. M. aleUord Is the con- window nt tho llopklnsvlllo Asylum some months ago. Smith seemed to tractor, be helped, mentally, by tho shako Tho Ladles Magnzluu Club will up ho got, but lias sulTercd much hold Its llrst mooting with Mrs. K. with tho Injured member since. Tho A. Chattel! Saturday week, the 21st leg wns cut oU Just abovo tho kneo instant. Mrs. Jo F. Foard and and tho patlont Is reported as doing MJss Celeste Mooro nro on tho pro- well. gram for that meeting. Good News for Our Renders. The Providence train will bo hold Who linvo scrofula taints In their at Henderson Thursday, Friday and blood, and who has not? Scrofula Saturday this week on account of lu nil Its forms Is cured by Hood's tho Henderson fair. Half rates on Sarsaparllla which thoroughly puriall trains. Friday and Saturday ties tho blood. This dlsenso, which will bo called Madlsouvillo and frequently appears in children, Is Hopkins County days. Is most freatly to to bo dreaded. It of neck, nircct tho glands Messrs. John Haider, Hr., W. K. which becomo enlarged, eruptions Uiiibtuad, John Kamper and O. Haid- appear ou tho head and face, and the er, of Kt. Charles, were in the ad- oyesare frequently nllccted. Upon vance lino of tho multltudo that went its first appearance, perhaps In slight to tho llluo and tho Gray ltounlon eruptions or pimples, scrofula should lie entirely eradicated from tho sysat Kvansvlllo to seo President They wont ovor Tuesday. tem bv a thorough course of Hood's Sarsaparllla to prevent all tho painRev. CO. Hall is now a liiombor ful and sickening consequonces of v filch of the Southern Illinois Conference, running scrofula sores strength drnln and M. K. Church, having boon recently tho Bvstom, sap tho transferred from Kentucky. His make oxlstonco utterly wretched. work is in tho Mt. Vernon District Nutting Party. at Crab Orchard, III, It Is probablo that Mr. Hall's Karllngton frionds Last Saturday morning a party of will soo him face to faco boforo a young ladles composed of Misses Cegroat while. leste Mooro, Lucy Crenshaw, Kthel Kvaus, Agnos and Suo llurr, Miunlo Rev. William H. Armstrong, a and Alice llourlnnd nnd chnporoned man nnd Methodist by Mrs. Jennie K. Mooro, wont to prominent preacher, of Missouri, may coma to l'ond River on a nutting expedition. Karllngton after tho Reunion of tho Tho day was pleasantly spent, the llluo and tho Gray at Kvansvlllo, to dinner much enjoyed, but tho nuts visit Mr. It. W. Wood. If so, ho will wero evidently left behind. Tho bo asked to preach for tho Karllng- party returned about 7 o'clock. ton people. Mr. Armstrong was captured by Morgan during tho war, Cold Steel or Death when tho forces of the latter wero a point on tho Ohio River "Thoro is but ouo small chanco to g save vour life nnd Hint Is through an In Western Kentucky by Mr. and a few volunteers. Tho operation," was tho awful prospect spirit of old comradeship brings him set uciore Mrs. i. u. jium, i umiu to visit Mr. Wood's brother at Ride, Wis., by her doctor after valn-l- v and then probably to Karltrvlmrto euro her of a friuhtful lngton. caso of stomach troublo and yollow Ho didn't count on-tl- io Jaundice. marvelous nowor of Klectrlo Hitters The Hawthorne Sisters. troubles, but The Hawthorne Bisters nro billed to Stomach ofand Liverseven bottles, it, took sha hoard to appear at the Masoulo Hall cured, avoided surKcon's tomorrow uluhtnnd Saturday was wbollv nnd fools itlirut. Thnv wero In Mndlsoiivlllo knife, now weighs moro positively over. It's tho llrst part of tho week, and their better than to euro Stomach, Liver tmtertalnuioutrt were t.aid to bo good. euarautecd troubles and never dis1'opular prices will prevail, 10, IX) and and Kidney appoints, l'rico 60c ntSt. Bcrnnrd BO Mc-Ku- en two-Btor- dition." brt' I , rr--r , Good for the Children. Mrs. Kiln Hinson, of Hlnton, Ala., writes us August 12, 1893. "I adviso all mothers to give tholr children I'lnnter's Nubian Tea when thoy aro puny or fretful. I keep this mediclno in tho houso and wlion tho children nro ailing Iglvo'thom adoso and that is tho Inst of it." Sold by St.Ilorunrd overstrained constitution but his Drugstoro. s w J . H sjs temperament, his habits and his de Most people thought a dozon years votion to duty In his buslnoBS nnd family relations hnd prevented his ago that tho walnut timber of Clark was doclared a draw. lion J, D. Uotkin, ...AnAGwr-p-S w Congressman-at'Largfrom Kansas. talcing needed periodical rest, al- county had beon nbout exhausted, Mrs. Crick, wife of Jesse Crick, Is though urtrod to do so by family and but since that timo thousands of feet and Man-a-HI havo been overcome; Ho was found doad at have been cut nnd It Is still coining. sick this week with fever. friends. Sam Graco and family ,of Red Hill, aflltcted, moro or less, for a quarter of homo by his wife a short timo after A Louisvlllo firm has bought twelve a century with cutarrh of tho stomach . tho fatal stroke had coino. Sho or flf toon hundred logs hero this sea- was visiting relatives at Haley's and constipation; a rcstilcnco In Wash' came homo from church nnd looking son. Many of thorn hnvo beon Mill last week. PERMANENTLY lngtoif has Increased tlieso troubles. to Europe, whllo soveral for him found him dead. Dr. John Grace nro near tho depot, and aro vlllo last Friday onwas in llopklns A David A. Mortou was forty-nln- o professional bus givenfow bottles of your medicines havo mo almost completo relief, nnd I yenrs old In Juno, and over since being prepared for shipment. Win- iness. ho entered the banking houso of his chester Democrat. lias oneo, moro am suro that a continuation of their Mnrlon Dukos BUy THE GENUINC-MAo ay father, John G. Morton, tho plonoor uso will effect a permanent euro. hanker of HopkhiB county, in his During tho winter of 18U7 Mr,, Jas. shaved olf his mustacho and looks a Is surely n wonderful rem-ei- y note. (AUIvRSIATGSYRVPg. young manhood, ho has beon closely Reed, ouo of tho leadlngcltlzons nnd likoamanof for catarrhal affections. Tho writer is glad to know that Va., nttentive and devoted to his business merchants of Clay, Clay Co., W.Ice "'SX! !. J. D. IJOTKIN. charmod writer from in U. No Hoo, the struck his legagainsta cako of as cashier of that bank. ro sau etui ohuwot. rou kx m mm. Last year tho bank was moved such a manner as to bruise ltsovcrely. Red Hill, Is satlsflod In regard to tho Into tho magnificent now building Itbecamo very much swollen and whereabouts of PerkliiB, nnd would LOCOMOI'IYE BLASTS. which wns largely tho conception of pained him so badly that ho could llko to say that ho did not have any David A. nnd Will C. and designed not walk without tho aid of crutches. thought of self destruction but was by tho latter, who drew tho plans Ho was treated by physicians, also only hunting that lonely farm houso nnd took personal chnrgo of their used soveral kinds of liniment nnd 111 tno inns 01 isortn unristian, mat Superintendent Martin, Assistant two nnd a half gallons of whiskey In U No Hoo cavo such a graphic de execution. Superintendent Mann, Roadmaster Tho docensed was known in busi- bathing it, but nothing gave relief scription of In The Bkk not long Robson nnd other olllcinls of tho ness nnd banking circles nnd wns a until he began using Clinmborlaln's since. Tho writer nrmed with tho Heudorson division made an inspecdo away with cumberprominent member of tho Masonic Pain Balm. This brought almost a Biblo to light tho evil spirits iliat tion of this division Inst week, and orders and of tho Odd Fellows. At completo cure In a week's timo and miirht bo found wanderlmr amid the wo vonturo tho nssortlou that thoy tho timo of his death ho was about to ho bellovos that had he not used this dark shadows of the hills and rocks wero woll pleased with tho condition plate-holder- s, go to to l'aducah to attend the Stato remedy his leg would have had to nnd took his shotgun for protection, in which they found tho track. Grand Lodge of the latter order, and be amputated. Pain Balm Is une- wiiiio no wanuorou aiono to una tins Many voters horo wero much dis nlso expected to attend the Masonic qual ed for sprains, bruises and rheu- romnntle domicile, where that son heavy, fragile glass plates, Grand Lodgo in Louisvlllo next matism. For salo by thetSt. Ber- took his father's llfo by mfstako, appointed last wook when they found Drugstoro, Karllngton: Bon but alasl ho travoled for miles and tnat uontmcior 1 nrocKinorton inueu nnd ho nro "reckoning without their nard week. bothersome dark-slide- s. Tho town of Madlsonvllle wns in T. Robinson, Mortons Gap ; Georgo senrched every hill ton and valley: to put in nn appcarauco nt tho speak- host." Thero Is no sontlment In- and King, St. Charles. plunged regardless of danger, Into ing announced nt Karllngton nnd volved; it is simply a question of mourning and all business sustho dark recesses of shadowy vale and Mndlsonvillo, but hope to seo business interest which will not pended and buslnoss houses closed Anions: pardon petitions turned and wended his way through flower and hear him boforo tho campaign Is yolld to tho demand of tho "spoll-blndor- ." Monday afternoon during the fuRnilroad Employe, In a neral, which took placo from tho down by Qovornor Bradloy was ono decked Holds, but mado no now dis- over. for tho pardon of Thomas Berry, a covery nor could ho find tho object residence of the deceased. . Law Airent Brainwoll and wife Card to tho Covington CommonHart county boy, who Is described by tho fncllo writer. And spent last Sundny with rolatlves hero. wealth. Rev. L. W. Roso, of Henderson, Kpiscopal minister, nnd Rev. J. L. serving n sontonco of ouo year In tho he concludes In the language of Mr. Bramwell Is so rushed with work film cartridges f of Bron AH KodaVs Tho Hill, pastor of the Madlsonvllle Kddyville ponltentlnry for malicious Gray: that he rarely ever finds time for chitis most stubborn enses Cousson's (which welch uw our but ounces, where pljus wslfti quickly succumb to Christian Church conducted servi- cutting. Pardon was also refused In- "Perhaps, In this neglected spot Is even a brief visit. Honey of Tar. Prico 25 and B0 cts. pounds) and can be loaded In daylight. Seres laid, ces nt tho houso. Tho romalns wero the caso of Tom Bridges, of Jessastyles use either plates or films. Wo believe thoro is a growing sen- St. Bernard Drugstoro. Somo heart onco pregnant with ceescortod to tho Odd Follows Cemo-ter- y mluo county, sent up for four years lestial flro; timent against Goebol among railby the Odd Follows, Masons for mansiaugtiter. Hands, that the rod of empire might road employes on this dlvlslon.cnused Louisville Industrial Exposition Kodaks, $5.00 to $35.00. and Knights Templars and followed " by tho great antagonism lie has have Swayed, MAS NATURE WARNED YOU- by tho largest funeral procession Street Fair. Midway CarniOr waked to ecstacy the living against rnilroad nnd othor corporathat Madlsonvllle has known. Nature herself clad la tUo early garbe ot f ortii t reel and flowers causlna lyre." Pkhkins. tions. Tho contest this yenr can not val and Festival of Fire, Tho Knights Templars hold ser- torlnir. tilostama EASTMAN KODAK CO. chord to vibrate bo said to bo a political ono In tho vice at the gravo under guidanco of the despondent- of all, springtime to this, the n.l how do Tho Louisville and Nnshvlllo Railmolt delightful true sensoof tlio word, but rather tho road will sell tickets to Louisvlllo "tSSrJ&SF 1). G. Witt and James Ton feel? Have you that tired sink feeling, Sir Knights Rochester, N.Y. Best way to Invest 35 Cents. resisting of nn attack on railroad nnd on tho abovo account at one fnre for forerunner of Chills, Malaria and Typhoid L. Lambert, of the Henderson FsTer K so, yon mutt Antioo. Miss., July 1, 1898. other industries of tho Stnto. Mr. Morton had been a as It is an IndlcaUon of not pats this warning alckness; aroid this; tho round trip Oct. 13, 18 and 21, member of Henderson Commnndery consult ns as onr advlcct costs 70a nothing;. Nkw Spknokk Mkdioink Co. Master of I want to tell you what I think of Dispatcher Trains Dovnoy and Chief limited two days In nddltion to dnto JOOOOOOOOOC on Tonr Commandery call Carlstedt'aaraggitt ana procure a ixmie 01 your uiitll Madlsouvillo siicridnu accompanied of salo. Will also sell at ono nnd German Mver Dr. Nubian Tea. 1 navo used it wns formed, and wns Fast Commnn-der- one dose a day at bed time (or Powder. Take d sis days; then myself and in my family, and it is all tho Inspection trnln whllemnklnga furo on Oct. 12, 14, 10, 17, both. follow br procuring a bottle of Yucatan Chill tho Henderson division lust 10 and 20 limited to two days addinose tour Tonic, following the directions and after two mat you claim ior 11 it is too It Is week.of After ho was laid to rest tho mound tion to dnto of salo. Used. remedies, you Liver Mediclno ; that markod tho placo was hidden weeks' conrse of these two rrtat la the spring;. Just tho thing to I over you feel bad will (eel like the flowers look tako if Tliero can ho 110 doubt of tho fact mass of magnificent Prepare yourself (or the malarial or hot season from view by a nay Save Your Life. It bilious. A. B. Lanoasteu. that fraudulent claims are ofton germs. If ie llornl tributes, sent nnd brought by when the atmosphere your full of warns yon, and aroby system Sold St. Bernard Drugstoro. brought ngainst rnilroad companies A doso or two of Foley's Honoy nnd many to indicate) their deep and last- necessary and when These Remedies In aiocM repeat the aMTe. Successor of the " I tuibrlilaeil " for Injuries received for which thoy Tar will provent nn nttack of pneuing lovo nnd friendship for him who nd (Old hr Tlio Ouo Great StAtularil Authority, So groat Is tho demand for labor iu nro not in tho least responsible; but monia, grip orsevcro cold If tnken in had been everybody's friend nnd a Kowrllrsllon. I. J Iirettrr, St. Bernard Drug Store. JlitUfrt l H, XMirrmo Court. some of the manufacturing towns of tho grentcst nttomnt nt fraud along timo. Cures coughs, colds, croup, holpcr and counselor to very many. many now BtHlltlurtl 15- -1 lino occurred last weok when a lngrippo, hoarseness, dllllcuP breath- X this Thus wo left him, but wo cherish Kdltor K. W. Whittomore, of Pennsylvania that riiKi coming from other places aro mini bv tho name of Davis, livimr at ing, wnooping cough, incipient conthe momory of his loving deeds and Grand Rivers, has announced that iHlif.llm I'.M. Hiitirrm. - . I '.mil. nil th. KUl. Nil- , useful llfo deep lu our hearts as a he will run an excursion to tho Paris compellod to sleep in touts. It is Hecla, got Into a sorious dlfllculty sumption, asthma or bronchitis. iirfiiwi uuri,nnuoiiirr neighbor or ills nnd during tno posltlvo relief advanced IflllltliaNiliuolliooks. sweet record iueifncable. Exposition next Juno. He says ho ovidontIs from thisathat Gonoral Pros- with a was struck in tho head with Gives of consumption, in asthma or stngos making winning canvnss. affray Wnrtiily expects to take thirty or forty per- perity York Mail and Kxpross. nn ax in tho hands of John Cook who bronchitis. Guaranteed. Campboll CoiuintMideil Now sons nt a cost not to exceed $200 each Deafness Cannot be Cured t.r suits SiiprrlnUit.1uls - J defending his mother nnd homo. & Co. was rf S huoli, ollrse t'mtby local applications ns they cannot and glvo them a trip of six weeks. for dead by Cook, ilt.nl. a trust is It priconot steol andthat is Itraising Dnvls was loftno rovivod, in met but Ladles' Wraps and Hen's Shoes. nlmotlMllltollt linlulxr. alroach tho diseased portion of tho Is tho tlio next day Iron. of tho Care of Lamps. XiiMiItinlilu ear. Thoro Is only one way to curo buyers, who overbid each other In most fully recovered and taking A full line of ladies' wraps and a III the ltnnsrliolj. OIhI t , deafness, nnd that Is by constituMany housekeepers think there Is their anxiety to purchnso mater- leave of absonco went to Mndlsoii- full lino of mon's shoes, nt rock bot tlio ten. Ir, trliolar. pro . irwiuiisi iuuii. nuu ku tional remedies. Deafness Is caused nothing to learn about the care of ial, tho supply of which is not vlllo and In tho presohco1 of several tom prices, may bo found nt tho St. ctlucntor. by nn Inflamed condition of tho mu- lamps, but if tho llttlo details here equal to tlie demand. Rochester witnesses mado claim tnat tno in- Rernnrd Gonoral Storo. Thoy will 5 tjiff2pccinicn jkujcs sent on tipjUication to cous lining of the Kustnchiau Tubo. montioued nro adhored to, tliero will (N. Y.) Democrat-Chronicljuries from which ho was suffering tako ploasvro lu showing them to Sa.&C.McrrlaiitCo.,rubl!aheraJ cents. wucn tins tuuo isiniinnieiivou nave be a great difference in tho light. woro Inflicted by bolng struck by a you. Drugstore. ? Springfield, MnHH. or imperfect hear- a rumbling sound train. First, a lamp must be cleaned and To Cure a Cold in One Day liopklnsvlll.. to the Circus. CAUTION" Do not b dClvcd la i luc. nnd when it Is ontlrolv closed. filled overy morning; tho burners buvlnir mill William Jennings Rryauis bo6ked Family Skeletons. Brakeman Gordon who was sorl-ous- for a speech at Nortonvlllo Monday Deafness is tho result, and unloss should bo elennod onco a weok, and Tako Laxatlvo Bromo Qulnlno Tab Ou October iKth the Louisville and injured Inst weok by falling afternoon Octobor 10, as ho goos "Vebiteri orDlcttontrlci.'our AM autt.ent.o i Goobcl speaks today at Barbours-vlll- o tho Inflammation can bo taken out the best way Is to boll thoin in water lets. All druggists refund money If alirlJffmrnt intmauonai jHruon wtlnui'itwar will sell round trip tickets Xashvllle ou mj lu tlie larlout lw having ono cure. d rooster and where a to tills tubo Gold Dust I. 'J j good in iairunicuiiHiuuwuinuif(uii. foriaccount ofreturning October U0, a rattlcsnako show will dlvido and condition, restored will its nor- - derwhichbeen added. Washing Pow- It falls toon each Tho genulno has I from a train and necessitated leg run through on his special train. tho over, nnd which tablet. hearing bo do mnl Forepaugh & SelN on Put a teaspoon-fu- l L. B. ,Q. has g SN W SM of tho limb, is imnrovIiiL'. honors with him. Hero's a good ox stroyed forever; ulna cases out of Into a quart of water, and boil Clrom. Monoy to patent good Idea may by ruso for rattling another family ten nro caused by Catarrh, which Is ton minutes. Tho flues should be Business has beon vory heavy on In connection with tho accident, tho secured by our aid. Addross, Tun O IVtrwwf lltlQMIOoal ICMUlSmll IwWvTWf ucttmm untMmJ yjanvwmi A cer skeleton but possibly recont oxporf-enc- o nothing but an Inflamed condition fiut In a pan of cold water, and tho Henderson division this weok exporlenco of Mr. Gordon wns con- Patijnt Rrooud, Raltlmoro, Mil. PERSONAL. tainly doubly pnlnful whon wo may cause him to confine his of tho mucous surfaces. slowly until thoy boll, then and the loss of two engines by wreck exhibits to tho trust nightmare and Wo will give ono Hundred Dollars take olf and let them cool gradually causes those in uso to bo almost on n sider tho fact that no 0110 on tho trnln missed him until tho train had Mr. C. I). Wright, of Richland, tho L. & N. bugaboo. Cynthlnun for any caso of Deafness (cnuscd by PARKER'S this toughens tho glass. continuous run. BALSAM proceeded from a point north of was lu tho city Tuesday. HAIRi beautllis tht cJfi Log Cabin. catarrh) that cannot bo cured by CleiDMt ana nnd thoro to Kollov Station, Hall's Cntarrh Curo. Sond for cirSalos of looso leaf tobacco in Vir iTomotd laiumni potuu Nature can only feed tho flame of Crofton lnthodnrkbyhlmsolf, unnblo Messrs. J. W. and George Flnloy, was rails Youthful Graj WTr to IU i? HwtoroColor, culars; froo. ginia for tho year ending September llfo with tho food eaten which Is di- ho of the country, wero lu Karllngton ' A Lima Man's Testimony. llair hair UUtefc Cum tcalp dfwftMt ftDmgtoi F. J. CIIKNFY & CO., Toledo, O. bu, amounted to i8,u.i.ri,wa pounds, gested. Hekiiine will reinvlgorato to walk ; but being a man of courngo Tuesday morning. IQe and HiMat of endurance, I havo obtained oxcollent rosnlts Sold by Druggists, 75c. and tlio- - nverago prico brought was a weak stomach and so Improvo di- and power railroad track ho ernwlod for a Miss Lucy Crenshaw returned lait from tho uso of Foley's Kldnoy Cure. Hall's Family Pills aro tho best. $0.85 per 100 pounds. gestion ns to insuro tho natural bloom along tho and sovoro of over half a mllo and reached week from an extorded visit to rela- It rellovod my back-ach- o of health. Price 50c. St. llornnrd up my Do You Want Repairing or Repains over tho hips. It toned a houso In tho suburbs of Crofton, tives in Christian county. A Short Sad Story. Drugstore. system nnd gave mo now vim and nearly exhuasted from loss of blood. i Mr. and Mrs. N. I. ToombM at- vltror. 1 roirnrd it as nu honest and modeling: on Your Home? A Cold. somoono Fine Work. It is an evident fact thatway tended tho Reunion at Kvansvlllo reliable remody for nil Kldnoy disNegloct. Having secured tho services of a somo yesterday. Pnouinonln. eases. It makes no falso claims but first-claFor fine watch work, clock work violated a rulo or In that causedmade Job carpenter, I am now tho Grief. and Jowolry repairing, call on W. G. a grievous mlstako Mr. J. 1). Llndlo, of Qrn'povlno, doos what It says v. hen given a fair propnred to do any kind of repairing Had Foley's Honey nnd Tar been Barter, L. & N. R.R.TImo Inspector, serious wreck near Kdgelleld Junc-tlo- h trial. I certainly, recommend It. In tho building lino, nnd I proposo to In town Sunday. was last Frldnv nlcht. in which two Wm. FINN, JSlldri Road, Lima, U mnko n special featuro of this class used, this story would havo had a Karllngton, Ky. Kvery pleco of engines and soveral cars were badly Miss Sallle McGrath Is visiting Campbell & Co. of work in connection with my regu- happier ending. 25c nnd C0e. Camp-bo- ll work warranted. Manufacturer ot demolished. Conductor Sparrow was friends In Kvansvlllo this week. & Co. High Grade .. .. lar contracting of buildings, comtrains in charge of ono of went to Kvans- who was at tho timo tho engines and Among thoso who plete, ready for Occupancy. If you Mr. John Twymau and family and Democratic Signboard. tho Probably wo could got Mr. Bryan vlllo yosterday to witness tho Miss Agnoa Wyalt attended tho on ono of thom, wns sovorely, In 16U0 tho Democratic prophooy want n now carpet strip, grate, manand soo President McKlnloy, Streot Fair nt llopklnsvlllo last was that prosperity could not coino tie, or n now uoiuo, gtvo 1110 a can to mako a Bpcoch on Sandy Hook, ns wns there would bo no further lack of wero Mrs. N. I. Toombs, Miss Iuez but not dangerously Injured,nccldent week. RtpslrWork t Specialty. without free coinage at 10 to 1. Last anil your work will bo dono promptly wind for tho yacht race Loxlngton Denno, Messrs. Chns. Cowoll, David also ono of tho firemen. Tho by Mrs. McKcal Bond and llttlo yoar tho cry was "Prosperity has and satisfaction trunrautoed. Herald. KD ax-lun- g Cowell, J. R. Deane, Karnost Rnsh, was caused on tlio north bound train PCy. o Jicspectiuuy, tho main trnck out daughter aro visiting tho family of not coino; It is nil a myth." Now Carl Woolfolk, G. C. Atkinson, W. pulling an nppronchlng train, whoro M. McConn, face of Jo F. Foard at Hecla. the prophecy Is "Prosperity cannot F. Shorldnnand M. Dovney.of Karl- thoy had no right unless under the A Monster Devil FJsh Contractor and Builder. wish to stnto to tlio general last.1' ouo of the sign Goo. King, nnd Barton Mr. J. R. Dean Is attending tho boards It reminds DeBtroylnir Its victim. Is a type of lngton, nnd of public that owing to tho de protection of a flag. aftor youthful America Is Karllngton, Ky., Oct. 10, 1889. St. Charles. llluo and Gray Reunion at Kvans-vlll- through Juggling with them on Constipation. Tho power of this Criitchfleld, mand for now work, ns well as all Conductor Low Waltz takes a How He Saved Them. murderous malady is felt on orgaiiB Hnllowo'en night. Exchnngu. view of tho political situation Swtir9issU5 J 1 rCffi gjZSEKBSjR? classes of repair work, I havo pronnu nerves aim muscles anti Dram Nnsi-vlll- e, Mrs. Edgar Rrnmwoll, of Mr. Bryan attaiuod promlnonco by this year as regards the Kontucky cured tho services of a first-claB- S There's no health till It's overcome guost of Mrs. Harry was the posing ns tho savior of tho working A Frightful Blunder election : whllo ho says ho has always shoemaker from Evansvillo, and Saturday and Sunday. Tills is llko tho story of tho But Dr. King's Now Llfo Pills aro a Rramwoll beon a Democrat and voted for BryFor Infanta and Children. Will ofton causo a horrible Burn, clnss. safo and certain curo. Host in tho which saved am now prepared to do all work an, he now fools when n candldnte Bucklou's pin swallowing it.a mnn's life by his world forStomnch, Liver, Lldneys Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Ashby nro vis- Scnld, Cut or Brulso. Mr. Bryan saved for which promptly on short notice. All iting relatives nt SlaughtorsvUlo Arnica Salvo, tho bosl In tho world, not pooplo from hard tlmos by not nnd Bowels. Only 25 cents nt St. Tha Kind You Have Always Bought assails tho company manner, ns ho tho has works lu nn uujust will kill tho pnin and promptly henl bolng elected. Loxlngton Herald. and In tho country, work guaranteed to fit and give Bernard Drugstoro. threatening to pass laws that Goebol, Old Soros, Fovor Sores, Boars tho satisfaction. Mrs. Knto Withers and Mrs. I'oarl it. Cures would cripple both tho company nnd nil Skin Ulcers, Bolls, Folonsf It looks ns thoucrh Airulnaldo nro Signature of Webb wero In Mndlsoiivlllo Satur- Eruptions. Best Pilo Corns,on earth. A Night of Terror. Its employes, It Is his duty to strlko cure fers Bryan to Georgo Washington. day. , Goebellsm botween tho eyes by votOnly 25cts. a box. Curo guaranteed, "Awful nnxloty was felt for the He has Just Issued $.'1,000,000 of BO YEARS' widow of the bravo General Burn-ha- worthless money. Loxlngton llorSold by St. Bernards Drugstoro. Mr. Dan Evans nnd family An unsigned communication from ing for Taylor. EXPERIENCE Sunday Irom St. Louis, whqro of Machlas, Mo., when tho doc nl d. Operator Frank Coffoy attended Mortons Gnu. found tho wnsto Consul McCook. of Dawson City, tors sniu suo couiu not live till they spent a few nays at mo basket this week. That kind always tho street fair at llopklnsvlllo Inst r says tlio mining outlook for tho Yu- morning," writes Mrs. S. H. Lincoln The snd HesIib.Mslnts'ner, sition. go to the wasto basket. Wo cannot weok. kon country Is Improving and that Who attended hor that night. "All Dr M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine, Strenr,ihen publish nnythlng without knowing ISJuSVASCOODFORADULTB. MIssNaihilo Stokes was In During tho threo months ending machinists would tfo well to go there thought sho must soon die from the Neirei, makes you I'lump snJ Cornel, snd who Is the writer. . Friday. Septomber 80, says tho Railway Age WARRANTED. PRICE 60 cts. with material for makingmnchincry, Pnouinonln, but sho beggod for Dr. Enriches the completion with nature's choicest OSLXTU, ILLS., NOT. IS, 1533. of Chicago, there wero about as many Now Discovery, snylng it hnd moro colors. Mrs. llenrv Wondolkon nnd lltllo which Is in great doniaud. M. DIGEST YOUR FOOD. mllos of railway construction ns In rsrli MoIIcIdo Co., soldLouis, Mo. COO bottles a year, We onco snvod her llfo, and had cured OenUemeni daughter, Verllo, of Clovorport, Thade Marks Ninety per cent, of all sickness Is caused br tho first six months of the yenr. GltOVK'U TABTKLK8S last CHILI. TONIC and hsrt Designs you want a biscuit board, an food not belnc; properly digested, it creates poifew days hero last week with flfatstfAM CUBAN RELIEF cures her of Consumption. spoilt a After threo If gross already this rear. Inallosrez 1800 there bought three 14 of Copyright 4 c. buslnoss. bars and friends. Mrs. Wdn-delk- IT IflnlKlS CoHc Kcuralgtaac I Toothache small doses she slopt easily all night, Ironing board, new grate, mantlo, or sons and roes into yoar blood and then yon are During the nlno months miles of now perlenco of Tears, In tho drug universal satl relatives I any disease the human system have been built 2,700 iv(aDTotnllm(1 eourStomocU and its further uso completely cured anything In tho building lino, cnll on liable to almost never sold an article that Kate such Anvone tending a sketch snd description mar wns on her way to Nashville Is heir to. Use Or. Carlsttdt'i German Llrer trnck. tulcklv ascertain our opinion froo wnemor au Slnco July 1, work has been UcUun as jour 'lonlo. Yours truly. 25 CenU. her." This marvelous modfeino Is M. McCord. to visit her daughter, Mrs. Joo Rob- and Summer Complaints. Invention It probably patentable. CommuUM. Powder and watch the results. Yon will feel Handbook tloiiiTstrtctlr conttdentfaL forsecurinifl-stent- on atenu Sold by St. llornnrd Drug Store. the rood effects after taking-- one dose. Glre It retnrdod by scarcity of labor and by guaranteed to curo nil Throat, Chest ertson. tent free. Oldeit throuih Inability to obtain rails and trnck slunn V. recelv Beef on foot sold nt $7 a hundred a trial and be convinced. Price. 2c ritenu taken ami Jjiing diseases, uniy kuo ami to date umtot notice, without charge. In tba $1.00. Trial bottles freo nt St. Her-nitr- at Chicago stock yards last weok, tho Dr. Otto'aSprttea Gum Balsam CurM supplies. Tho construction exceeds that of any year slnco 1802, Your Cough. Justth Madlolna Drugstore highest prico paid slnco 1881. Scientific EUGENE diOen JvYee excepting 1808. Of tho totals, Arfor Children. Woman's Frland A handsomely illustrated weekly. ' Tot sale bjr kansas leads with 231 miles, whllo Thousands of the most stubborn person inter EWerSeel at Nebo. FIELD'S to eacb subscribing to Tho Iowa Is second with 203. Dirt Worst Enemy St. Bernard Drug Storo. enses of ested in havo ontliti3,agt'0, audiences and distressing 'fabler's piles Olnt-mon- t. contributed Largo and I'ield Southorn States havo boon cured by Pile HUNN &Co.36,Droad"NewYork bouvrnlr Fund POEMS.. the Eugeneany smounl aro greeting KlderSI' H. ?'oI at It never falls to euro. Price, It Is sfntod that a numbor of Amor-lea- n 031, against CWj for tho South-wnntnBranch Offlco.33 V SU Washington, V. C Subscribe Ktiiteg nnd Territories, in Nebo. Tho mootl ng holg holding Is 50 ots in bottles; tubes 75 cts. St. engineers have been civil desired. Subscriptions A 1 during Hr5 time Nearly all tho as low as tioo will enby the TraiiBvanl to dostroy cluding Missouri. Bernard Drugstore. title donor to this daintnine havo beon added to the chi!rc1' railroads in tho event of war with W. A. NisiiKT, I'rosidont. ily artistic volumo BOOK. rnf. hv nntifnRRinii nnrl linuttatn Tho light for Republicanism Is os- - Great Britian. O. W. Wapuim., Cashlor. FIBLD FLOWIRS meotlntr will continue until n'.n inafr outIally tho wage earners' battlo. Tlie Cook ef ibe cloth bound, 8 x tr, st a century handsome of this wook. t0T n,m 'r ',0 deserts his own YOU ought to know that when BuHOPKINS COUNTY certificate of AlaS Ir illustrated by Hook conffering from any kidney trouble cnugcaHarrisonvlllo (Mo.) News. thlrtvtwo of the of On th 10th of December, 1807, Rov. World's Great esi tains a selectionmost that a safo, sure remedy is Fo- - Why cough and risk consumption, 1 Itld's best and Atlllts. T. A. Dounhoo, pastor M. E. Church, -uy '10 forelock." If ley's Kidney Cure. Guaranteed when tho celebrated Dr. John W. renresentstirs works "Take tKno South, Pt, Pleasant, W. Va., con- your ana I reaay ior tienvtry. uui ior lue nouia Cough Syrup will curo you at blood hiout of ",or boKi tak- or monoy refunded. Campbell & Co. Bull's Ithovorfallstocurethroatand contribution of the world's greatest artists tracted a sevoro cold, which was once? at once and this book could not bare been manufactured from tho first by violent ing Hood's KrtIflnParm " lllnna. lung troubles. For bronchitis, soro Mrs. WIlllo E. lloyd, of EarlliiRton. for less than l?.oo. The Fund created Is diMadisonville, Ky. coughing. Ho says: "After resort- provont serious vided equally between ths family ot the Isle and hoarseness it is invaluable Is visiting her father's family, M. T. throat Eugene Field and the Fund for the building ing to a numbor of 'specific's nt Nobo. Winstentt, - $50,000. Bryan, In of a monument to the memory of the beloved Gapial Stock, usually kept In the houso, to no pur- - nilnva. ian'r. his BlumpK'toure poet of childhood. Address Inmilrlnn- NL'lO I purchased a bottlo Of Cham-erlalnr- rt abouts of General Prospoflty' J Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medietas Quickens Monument Somtnlr Fund, Eugene Field Cough Remody. which acted Transacts a gonoral banking busllbs Appetite, Aids Di(sstion, (Ives Tonic and 180 Monroe St.. Chicago, llko a charm. I most cheerfully "moets up" with him on ovorvcorI,0 noss nnd invites tho account ot the Vigor to all tbe functions, snd fortifies tbc ; Dook Stores. It you also wish to Also st Minneapolis Tribune. recommond It to tho public." For cltizons ot Hopkins nnd adjoining tern sgalml Epidemic Influences. send postage, enclose toe. Mention sale by St. Borniird Drugstore, Karl- - Dr, M. A. Simmons Lifer Medicine countlos. Tin list, as adv. la inserted Will cure a Hacking Cough. hss itt$!?r I at our contribution, Has tlio finest and most secure - Charles; Remember the Hawthoruo Sisters Doses are small and pleasant to take. Doctors U'Bt0,",G.G?r& $',1&! benehled others snd Is reasonably certain to dS I Ben T. Robinson, Mortons Gap. 'J at tho Masonic Hall tonight. vnult in this section of Kentucky. recommend it. l'rlce as cts. At all druggists. i ... llopklnsvlllo last Tuesday. Leo. llttlo daughter of Mrs. Lou Crick, died last Monday with fever. William Young nnd Mrs. Ida Don- ton, of Rod Hill, were quietly mar ried In Hopklnsvillo last Monday. Tho groom Is eighty years old, whllo tho brldo is only thirty. G. W. Graco. of Wynns. made a business trip to Madlsonvillo last Friday. John Wvnn nnd W. R. Putman. of Wynns, attended court In Hopklnsvillo last Friday. Two of our best cltizons put 011 pu gilistic nlrs ono day last week, but tiioiigutiasteu oinyono ronnu nnu e Pe-ru-- ed i now building Is hi tho Interest of existing railways. Tho year's total will roach 4,000 miles. If Mr. Goebol has nothing hotter to offer rnilroad employes than a promise to mako war on railroads If ho should bo olected Governor of Kontucky, ho certainly pays a very poor compliment to the intelligence of railroad men by asking them for their votes In his bohalf. Tho vory dullest railroad man knows that to cripple a rallrpad b hostile legislation means to Vcduce Its ability to earn monoy nnd necessitates a reduction in Us expenditures. Now nil shop mon know that no furthor reduction can bo- - mado either in tho quantity or cost prico of material necessary to tho maintenance of motivo power and maintenance of cars, and trackmen and bridgemon know that in tho matter of material for maintenance of tracks, trestles, bridges nnd buildings, no further economy cnu bo used. Firemen nnd onglnomcn hnvo beon encouraged by substantial rowards In tho shnpo of premiums nnd promotions, to economize in tho uso of fuel and lubricants until the cost in that direction is at lowwnter mark. It follows, then, that tho only wny In which railroads can reduce expenses is to roduco tho wages of tholr employes. This would not bo done In a spirit of revenge. It would simply bo a business necessity. For railroads aro govorned by tho Bnmo business laws as thoso by which individuals aro governed nnd both do business for the purposoof earning monoy In excess of Mint which is spent ill operating tho business, Of courso,whoti expenditures are greater under a plan of management than rocolpts, thon that plan must bo changed, and thoro s but one practical change that can bo mado. At present tho rnto of wages upon railroads Is fairly good. It Is mado doubly so by tho greater purchasing powor which a dollar how has as compared to its power In that direction n fow years ago. Tho necessities, and, indeed, tno luxuries of life nro choapor than formerly, whilo tho rates of pay are now hotter than for somo timo past. All classes of rail road men nro Bntlsflcd that tho present stnto of wncrcs could not bo con tinued If tho earning capacity of railroads should bo crippled by having their buslnoss nrbltrnrlly controlled by men who nro avowedly hostllo to railroad Interests. For this reason if Mr. Goebol nnd his commutators aro expecting sup- - fy&Pfi Acts gently on Kidneys, Liver and Bowels System manses the VJ 1 nisP-L5fcr:tTTm the Goyi. Habitual constipation N'r .vzkrt 'TSBt.C,ALECT& w:?& .i Kodaks some y. Just turn a light-proo- Key - Com-mnnder- y. ll-- e of one-thir- International Didi&onary 'Webster's Ann-titron- om-ploy- cs 1 Miiilntlirrl-iliintto- 7 , e. ly four-legge- trade-mar- I ACAOTMaC 1 t tlls-lan- HeI ss GROVE THOS. B.YOUNG d, coro-monl- os Boots and Shoes, tori, I In-th- e. son-blb- le TASTELESS &0$zfa Li m Ileillh-Reitore- Mndl-Bouvll- lo TDNIC ijTJJTjra flmerkaH. lion-ume- rl I LL -- U Btst Jtd'SmsKm, m $7.00 V if WHY COUGH tcbicrlp-tlontotun- BANK.- - "' -- . -v Dr.BulIs COUCH SYRUP t- . you food. Try HI ......,...,.. f. X. fir w Ji . 'A4 H ''.'Ite ' " ' a".:-?r7ifr-i- .. 5' OUAliU JfAWR OF DEFENDENT. Sultjof J. H. Lunsford Against iRelnccke Coal Co, Decided. Asked Damages r. THE 13 ALLOT. for Polluted Water on Farm Land. vMndlsonvllIo, Ky Oct. 11 Tho J. II. Lunsford against tho ltolnecko Coal Company for nlleged dnmngos on account of water, polluted by minerals In solution, that flows through farm land of tho plaintiff was today decided In Circuit Court hero by a verdict for tho defendent. This Riiit caused cousldornhlc Interest. Tho plnlntllf claimed that his farm's productiveness was Injured by tho water, whllo tho de- -' fondant hold that tho damage was limited to tho pollution of water for Htoqk, nnd sot up tho linportanco of thacoal mining Industry against tho valuo of such claim. Many witnesses were heard. fiillt of Stable .Burned. , The inulo stablo of tho St. Jlcrnard - Coal Company at Morions Gap, burned Tuesday afternoon. The building and' contents was a total loiJs, but no stock was burned. It whs fired by chillers hauled and put. into tho stalls, tho man who hauled thorn not realizing thoy were hot. Tho loss will probably roach 2.u00 Including a car load of corn that had been put In within a few . dayp past. Thero was no Insurance. Republican Speaking p Judge morion. Dates. V. II. Holt and Capt. J. W. Throck-- j p. in. .. Saturday, Oct. p. in. Thursday, Oct. 12, Franklin, 1 p. m. 'Friday, Oct." 13, Smith's drove, 1 14, Urownsvllle, 1 JuJg! Clifton J. I'raltandW. II. Day. Saturday, Oct. 14, 1 . mtssollvlllo, p. in. Glasgow, Monday, Oct. 10, 1 p. m. Versailles, Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1 p. in. Nlcholasvlllo, Thursday, Oct. 10, 1 p. in. Lancaster, Friday, Oct. 20, 1 p. m. Winchester, Monday, Oct 23, 1lp in. Carlisle, Wednesday, Oct 25, pin. Tolesboro, Thursday, Oct. 20,1 pin. R Hon. John V. Yerkea. Howling Green, Tuesday, Oct. 17, 1 p.' in. Greenville, Wednesday, Oct. 18, 1 p. m. Hopklnsvllle, Thursday, Oct. 11), 1 p. lii. Madlsonville, Friday, Oct. 20, 1 p. .in. .. Rmltliland, Saturday, Oct 21, 1 p m. Hickman, Monday, Oct. 23, 1 p. in. l'aducah, Tuesday, Oct. 24, 1 p. in. ,Uartford,Wednesday,Oct.21,lpm. It. X. Lander and II S. Smith. p. m. e- - to bo tho form of disconrso which apMonday, Oct. 10, Klkton, 7:."0 p. in. peals to tho multitude nnd which is of7:30 ten the. vebiclo of trnths that would Tuesday, Oct. 17, Allensvlllo, p. in. man of Wednesday, Oct. 18, Kussellvllle, never otherwise bo grasped. No2C. Suneenso would devote CO, or even 7:30 p. in. yrhursdav, Oct. 10, Auburn,7:30pm. day ovenlngs dnrlng the year to sermons of this character, but an occa., JFriday, Oct.20,15ovllngGrcen,7:30 p. in. j, sional sympathetic discuesionof n story Saturday, Oct. 21, Greenville, 7:30 of tho first order by a minister well p. m. versed in general literature and sklllfnl in discerning its relations to lifo is as Louisville Industrial Exposition legitimate and may bo as fruitful as expository or doctrinal or any other Street Pair. Midway Carnikind of Dreachlnc. Concrccatlonallst val and Festival of Fire. The Homo nnd the Church. llail-roa- d Tho Loulsvlllonnd Nashville Thero are two kingdoms of which will sell tickets to Louisville the homo nnd on tho above account at ono faro for peaco Is tho sovereign tho round trip Oct. 13, 18 and 21, the cbnrch. No one should ever throw limited two days in addition to date tho pebbles of discord into those waters. of salo. Will also sell at ono nnd Why one shonld remain in either when d faro on Oct. 12,11,10, 17, bis presence gives offenso Is a species of 10 nnd 20 limited to two days addimartyrdom wo cannot understand. Distion to (Into of sale. cord is antagonistic to the ono pnrpose of church and home life. To fight for a ,The contract has been lot for the position In either Is a battlo to which construction of tho Ohio & Kentucky cannot coino. God made tho railroad, to extend from Jackson, in victorywider than our necessities delircatliltt county, through Wolfo world The margin belongs to those county, into tho rich coal and timber mand. lands of Knstern Kentucky, a dist- who ore always better than their neighPresbyterian Jcnrnnl bors or friends. ance of 20 miles. buo-thlr- Thursday, Oct. 12, Kutlawa, 7:30 Friday, Oct. 13, l'aducah, 7:30 p in. Saturday, Oct. 14, Cadiz, 7:30 p. in. shift their responsibility to the county boards, to be shifted In turn to the precinct election officers. Under this machlno they are responsible and It Is not possible for 'them to escape responsibility," That being the case, why aro such election officers appointed In Fayette county? That being the case, why does the Dispatch feel moved to talk about what It calls "The Lexington Outrage" In the following: " "Tho purpose of tho Qocbelltea was strikingly displayed In the action of the Fayette county election commissioners. According to the reports from Lexington which have not been denied, the Goebel commissioners resorted to the characteristic Goebel method of deception. They told the Republican, commissioners Uiat the time In which registration and election officers weroio be appointed expired last Friday and that the appointments must be made that day. They did not wait for the notice of appointment to reach the Republican member, and with their complete list of officers, both Republican and Democratic, already prepared, and the minutes of the meeting written up In advance, the Goebel program was rushed through without consideration of the lists as proposed by the Republicans. "This Lexington affair Is In line with the threats that have been made that the Goebelltes are to do the counting. It shows that an effort will bo made to put these threats Into execution wherever the gang believes tho people will submit. It demonstrates the urgent necessity of a thorough organization for the protection of the ballot and for the punishment of ballot thieves." Tho NotcI and the Talpll. Wo should think that a ministei whose chief aim was to preach the gospel might bo trusted to make nso of whatever material would further that end. Moro and more tho story appears Hones, Hen vt All 1'artlea Should Or catilae at Once. The Louisville Dispatch begins an editorial In the words following: "Judge Pryor and Captain Kills aro Democrats whose loyalty to Democratic principles has never been quesThey are men of Integrity, tioned. and no matter what may be the dlflcr-eopinions of the people as to tho Goebel law there has been no disposition, to doubt that these gentlemen would do all In their power to honestly administer the law and to prevent frauds In the elections. They occupy positions of power as well as responsibility. They may at any time remove any member or all of the members of any county board of election commissioners In the state. It Is not necessary for them to prefer charges and give a hearing. They do not have to give n reason for removal. Their discretion Is broad and their power absolute. This power makes them personally responsible for the conduct of tho men they appoint. They can not at THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON III, FOURTH QUARTER, INTERNATIONAL SERIES. OCT. 15. 7 Text of (lie l.raxon. Ut. till, 7 diilden Jlcmory Vcrea, Text, I'm. xxxvtt, rrepnrcJ Jiy the Her. I). SI. Strain.. 8-- 8, IB-113-1- HrtHrtrtSHHHHrtSSHHHHHrtrtrtrtHStrt5t!StSiHtH!tSt!tStSiSi!iH!t StSt I ST. BERNARD COAL COMPANY i INCORPORATED. . Jl ff A M I .' r M Ring in the new Ring out tho fabe Ring in the true " We bring to you tha new and true from tbs plney forests of Norway N " King out the old DR. BELL'S Pine-Tar-Hon- ey '! Nature's most natural remedy, Improved by science to a Pleasant, Permanent, Positive Cure for coughs, colds and all Inflamed surfaces of tha Lungs and Bronchial Tubes. Lungs are exhilaThe sore, weary cough-wor- n mucus Is cut out) the rated; the microbe-bearincause of that tickling Is removed, and the Inflamed membranes are healed and soothed so that thero Is no Inclination to cough. SOLD BY ALL QOOD DRUGGISTS g Bottles Only. I AM 08 VEARS OLD. and never tned auy munly equal to Dr. IlcUl It gives quick and permanent relfof In crip MweUu coughs and colds. It malt , A. Metculia, weak lonea rrtroQg.-- ra. Vuducab,Kr. 25c, 60o. and $1.00 SImc Flni-Tar-HM- BE SURE YOU GET Dr. Bill's tt'ZAS&SSeWasi,'; ASSESSES ANEWDEPABTURE A Copyright, 1S99. by D. M. Stearns. 3. "And Ksther spake ret again before the UliiB and fell down nt Ids feet and besought lilm with tears to put away Uie mischief of Unman, the Agagltc, nnd his device that he had devised ngnhut the Jews." The topic Is Esther pleading for her people, but this nnd the following chapters nro only the conclusion of the story of Goil's overthrow of llnninn nnJ his plot through Kstlior nnd Monlec.il. The king's sleepless night, hU request for the book, of records, his hearing therefrom that Mordccnl had saved lib life, nnd no honor hnd been conferred upon him for it; Unman being found hi the court Just then, hU being cnllcd In and nsked what should be done for tbownnn to honor, his whom the king answer, thinking thnt It meant himself; his being compelled to do this for the man whom ho had hoped to hang on tho gallows he hnd caused to be mnde nnd his being hanged himself on the same gallows wo soon afterward nil give n most striking Illustration of one falling Into the pit he had digged for another. 4. "Then the king held out the golden scepter townrd Ksther. So Esther nrose nnd stood before tho king." So had the king done when Esther enrue the first time, and he bad said to her at that time: What wilt thou, Queen Esther, and what Is thy request? It shall be even given thco to the halt of the kingdom (chapter v, 2, 3). It nny ono came to the king without being called and the golden scepter was not held out to them, It meant death to the one thus Intruding (chapter Iv, 11). How unspeakably great Is the privilege of every sinner to come to God through Jesus Christ, sure that he will not be cast out (John ill, 10; ltcv. xxll, 17; John yl, 37) nnd of every saint to come ns often ns he will, relying upon the promises In John sir, 13, fi. "And snld. If it nlcase the king, and If I have found favor In his sight, nnd the thing seem right before the king, nnd I bo pleasing In Ids eyes, let It lie written to rcverso tho letters devised by Hainan." These letters, the verso goes on to say, wcro written to destroy the Jews In all the king's provinces, nnd for the lives of these Jews Esther was pleading. Moies and Samuel nro two of the greatest intercessors on record among mere men. but there came n time in Israel's history when even such Intercession as theirs would not avail (Jcr. xv, 1). In answering one of Moses prayers the Lord said unto him, I will do this thing also that thou hast spoken, for thou hast found grace in my sight, nnd I know thee by name (Ex. xxxiii, 17). C. "For how can I endure to see trie evil that shall come unto my people, or how can I endure to sec the destruction of my kindred?" Consider the sorrow of heart and intercession of Moses, Nenc-miaDaniel nnd Paul (Ex. xxxii, 32; ConsidNeb. Ix; Dan. Ix; Itom. ir, er Jeremiah also as he suffers with his nconle In their sorrows because of their sins (Lam. I, 12, 1G), nnd as we think of our Lord actually taking our place ncd bearing our slus in IIli own body, may Jeremiah's question search us. Is it nothing to you? 7. "IJehold I have given Esther tho house of Haman and him they have hanged upon the gallows, because he laid his hand upon the Jews." Thus said the king to Esther and to Mordeeal, and In verses 1 and 2 it is more fully stated how Mordecnl wns put in Human's place of authority and the king's ring which Haman hnd worn wns given to Mordeeal. To touch the people of God Is to touch God Himself, even ns it Is written, lie that touched) you toucheth the apple of His eye (Znch. 11, 8), nnd when Saul persecuted the Christians the Lord Jesus said from heaven thnt Saul wns persecuting Him (Acts ix, 4). 8. "Write ye also for tho Jews, as It liketh you, In the king's name and seal It with the king's ring." The rest of tho verse says that such writing so sealed may no man reverse. A law of the Medcs and Persians once made could not be altered (chapter 1,10; Dan. vl,8,12.1C). Itut as the letters which had gone forth had given power to all the people of the provinces to kill all Jews, young nud old, on the 13th day of the twelfth month It wns possible now to send forth other letters authorizing the Jews to be ready ngnlu.it that day to avenge themselves on their enemies, mid this wns done speedily (verses 1M4; compare chnpter 111, 15. "And Mordeeal went out from the presence of the Ling In royal npparel of blue nnd white nnd with a great crown of gold and with a garment of Due linen and purple, nud the city of Shuchnn nnd wns glad." Sec nlso what U written of him in chapters lx, 4; x, 3, hi. greatness In the king's house and In all the provinces ns well as among his own people nnd how he was next to the king, seeking the wealth of his people nud spenking pence to all his seed. He innkes us think of Joseph nud Lis position In Egypt nnd the blessing which he was made to his people. Itotli came up from great humiliation nud from the place of nnd a source of death to be blessing to multitudes. 10. "The Jews had light nnd gladness and joy and honor." The Crst half of the next verse says thnt this was the case In every province and city where the king's commandment nnd decree came. Had Mordecnl bowed to Haman this would not have been, but because he was faithful to his God, like Joseph nnd Dnntel nnd his friends, he, like they, wns greatly blessed nnd honored nnd mnde n blessing to many. All are typical of Him through whom alone true joy nnd honor and gladness conies, the only light of the world. 17. "And ninny of the people of tho land beenme Jews, for the fear of the Jews fell upon them." So we nre reminded thnt when the glory of the Lord shall be seen upon Israel in the latter days nil nations shall through them be blessed and thnt people out of all nations shall take hold of n Jew, saying, Wo will God Is with you, and all go with you,-fonations shall go up to Jerusalem from year to year to worship the Lord of hosts Zach. vlll, 23; sir, 10). It (Isa. Ix, was very evident In this case that God was with tho Jews, and therefore the people turned to them. When the Philistines came to Isaac, desiring to have bW favor, the reason tbey gave was, Wo saw certainly that tho Lord was with thee (Gen. xxtI, 28). h. ). r MineMd Shippers of GQftL AND COKE. ..I. i General Office, Earlington, Kentucky, r v, IS I ft ft 2 THROUGH visnauini .TfUWSDAlLY i i S .BivHirroln OfTiooss. JAMES It. LOVE, Manager, 201 N. Chctry Street, Nashville, Capt. It. G ROUSE, Mfr, Palnirr Mouse, Broad wity, I'.iducali, Kentucky. Tennessee. S. II. NEWBOLD, Manager, 342 V. Main Street, Louisville, Capt. T. L. LEE, Manager, Corner Main and Auction Streets, Memphis, Tciin. Kentucky. A. S. FORD, Manager, 327 Upper Second Street, Evansville, Intl. & BRO. HESSER & MILTON, W holeiaa e? Agentw-HU-J. W. BRIDGMAN, Memphis, Tenn. Building, Chicago, Room 404, Fisher Building, St. Louis, Mo.; 1 NT 111. NASHVILLE htHJ AND IHROUaHSUt- - fmmm CARS mmum FROM ftCiMAGQ. iSSMte f.P.JEFrRIE5.0.P.A iVAHiviat.mo. 0.nitlLLH&H.G.J NAiflVilLE.IfHH Rialto NASHVILLE, CHATTANOOGA ST. LOUIS RAILWAY. PULLMAN PALAIC SLCCPINQ CARS I i I I THE' FAMOUS Market. NO. B COAL; For all uses, from Earlington, Diamond and St. Charles Mines. Only Vibrating Screens and Picking Tables used. THE BEST SELECTED COAL IN THE Uotwoon Nashville and Chattanooga, Atlanta, Augusta, Maeon, Jaokson-vlllKiioxvilli), Ashevllle, Italtlmoru, I'hiladelphla, Now York, Portsmouth, Norfolk, Jackson, Memphis, Littlo Itoek, Texarkana, Bhennaii, Waco, Dallas worm. and o, n, WrsIi-lngto- -- -- 'i' r ait ' Palace Day Coaches on all Trains Information pertaining to TICKKTS, KOUTKS, KATKS.KTC. Will ho cheorfiilly furnished upon application to Ticket Agents, or to . J. WKi,oir, Division Passenger AfM.nt '' A,'" .. BRUSHED BOKE FOR BASE BURNERS AND PURNHBES. Why buy Anthracite Coal, when you can get ST. BERNARD CRUSHED COKE for a much less price? One ton of the Crushed Coke will do the same work as one ton of the best Anthracite Coal. High-price- d a.rmiltilil.2. i C J. II. IiATiMKit, Houtheasterii Phim- euger Agent, Atlanta, ua. D.J. Mil i.i.ankv. Northeastern I'atM.Agt., nu w. j- ourtu Mrcct, (jiiicim- 'Illtl. $ ASK YOUR DEALER FDR IT AND SAVE MDNEY $ssit;-t;isis- ; MR. EPIZOOT WILKINS. CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR. It.C.CnWAMUiN, Western l'asseniter Agent, Hoo m 4l)u, Hallway Iltiildliig, Ht. Itiils, Mo. ItitlAUl) I'. II11.1., Northern 1'mm- cnger Agciu, 1 too 111 ;sars, jvinrqueii lliilldlnir. Clilcairo. HI. J. Ij, Kdjio.ndko.v, KiutluTii Pass. ougcr Agt., Chattanooga, Tenn. W. L. DANLEY, Clen'l Pass, ami Ticket Agt., gi unit llliln NAHHVII.t.H, TKNK. Saralai Faw t$tfts$s? Tone. Capital Hack fala tn, IB0.0M C6MMCNCEB BUIINCtS IN Radical Change In Marketing Methods as Applied to Sewing Machines. An original plan under which you can obtain easier terms and better value in tbd purchase of the world famous "White" Sewing Machine than ever before offered. Write for our elegant H-'- f catalogue and detailed particulars. How we can save you money in the purchase of a sewing machine nnd the easy terms of payment we can offer, cither direct from factory or through our regular authorized agents. This is an opportunity you cannot afford to pass. You know the "White," you know Its manufacturers. Therefore, a detailed description of the machiue and its construe. iou is unnecessary. If you have an old machine to exchange we can offer most liberal terms. Write Address in fulb WHITE SEWING MACHINE COMPANY, (Dop't A.) Cleveland, 61!t. high-grade 'WAA Ay- "- VORMS! : VERMIFUGE! MoeilnQaaoUtr. WHITE'S CREAM UctlaQuilltr. 2. Opportunity brings responsibility and, if lost, places tho blame npon ourselves (Math, xxlil, Christ had been willing to gather the people of Jerusalem to Himself, to protect them us n hen doth her brood, bat Jerusalem would not Tho opportunity to bo taved placed tho responsibility of salvation upon the people, and when they rejected it and doom cnino they alone were to blame. The fact that God gives ns opportunities relieves Hint of the responsibility nnd places it upon us, and if wo fail we can pacs no censure npon Qod, but must bear the brnnt of failnro onr selves. This serious fact shonld iimpirr ns to seize nud nso every opportunity of lire for being good and doing good nnd for making the ealvatlon of onr Bonis absolutely certain. 8. Lost opportunities lire irrevocn bio (Heb. xii, 17). Ean hid the opportunity of inheriting tho blessing of tho firstborn son of Isaac. ' He lightly esteemed it and rejected it, nnd "when he wcnld have inherited the blessing he was rejected, for ho found no place of repentance, though ho sought it carefully with tears." It was too late. He had lost hi? opportunity. Another possessed the blessing, and it could not be returned to Esan. Out nndoubtedly tho blessings hero do not typify tho salvation of the soul, but rnther opportunities for service. Bnt in tho parable of tho virgins wo havo an illustration of an opportunity for salvation which, once lost, never returned. This is the saddest phnso of opportunities. Onco gone, they novrr roturn. The past is irrevocable Wo may repent onr loss, wo may mourn for our opportunities, but no repentance, no mourning, will ever recall them. How Important, therefore, that no opportunities shonld be lost) Pa. sxxll, 0; EccL Diblo Headings. xii, 1; Isa. Iv, 0, 7; Math, v, 25;xxv, Think of (1 oil. : ; Luko xili, 24, 25 ; John vll, Just tnrn from tho world n moment nnd think of God. Do so especially Vlll, 21 j ix, 4 j I Cor. xv. B8; II Cor. when yon aro anxious and worn with vi, 1, 2; Heb. iv, Ml. cn.ro. Tnrn to Him and lcavo yonr trou-bl- o To Lovo Them. with Him. Many of them will shrink Every relation to mankind, of ha to or and look foolishly small when His light falls on them. Yon will find, llko tho scorn or neglect, is full of vexation nnd man in tho fairy tale, that tho devil has torment Thero Is nothing to do with men bnt to lovo thero; to contemplato been leading yon on by making yon that withered turnips wcro gold. their virtues with ndmiratlon, their Turn to God in your momenta of joy faults with pity and forgiveness. Task and gratltndo too. Share them with all tho ingenuity of your mind to deviso Hi in. Apply tho social instinct to tho some other thing, but yon can nover best companion of all to yonr Father. find it To hate yonr adversary will not help yon; to kill him will not help Watchman. yon; nothing within tho compass of tho All ThliiB" Now. naving tho mind of Christ, let tho universe can help yon but to lovo him. days find yon bearing one another's Dnt let that lovo How out upon nil burdens or tilling tho hours ns they pass around yon, and whnt could harm yont with n bcantiful service, which shall bo How many a knot of mystery and misas gifts of gold, frnnkincenso and myrrh understanding would bo untied by one laid again at tho feet of Him who en wo word spoken in Blinplo and confiding to cover onr sins with forgiveness and trnth of heart I How ninny n solitary to mako all things now. I. Monch placo wonld bo mado glad if lovo wero there, and bow many n dark dwelling Chambers wonld bo filled with light I Orvlllo 33-8- 4 o Let opportunities. Jcr. fill, SO; Math, lleb. ill, 17. xilll, Several pbasea of opportnnltles nnd their losa ore presented to na in Mm topical references. Tliey shonld inako n serions nnd lasting impression npon ns beennso of the greatness of onr opportunities today. 1. Tho greater the opportunity tho moro serions its losa (Jcr. vlii, SO). "The harvest is passed, tha snnnner is ended, nnd we nro not saved." The Jews had their opportunity to bo saved, bnt they rejected salvation, nnd tho kingdom was lost, nnd tho serionsnes.i of tho loss was tremendonsly tnagnilled beennso of tho priceless valne of that which was lost tho lifo and well being of n nation. To losonn opportunity that involves littlo is perhaps of small moment, bnt to loso nn opportunity that involves tho destiny of n na'tion or the eternal destiny of an i minor tnl soul, Ion matter of the most stupendous inijior-tance- . Our most valnablo opportunity is for ealvatlon in Christ. Let us bcj to it that the harvest does not pass without onr being saved. topic For the Week ncttlnnlnjt Oct. 18 Comment 1' Iter. S. II. Doyle. Dewev. I For 20 Years Has Led all Worm Remedies. pr.p.xii.r UOXaX 1S1C AXjXj dhu&gibts.mSH? JAME8 F. BALLARD, St. Louis. LulttS WHlkF All llk( fill! Host Cuusb tijrnp. Tulei Uaul Ueel ma Rota i Tho flglit for Republicanism is tho wage earners bnttlo.-Mm-k for him If lio deserts lilx own cnuso. Ilarrlsonville (Mo.) Now0."lI grate stile. 1 wux nfrndo lie bed ono ole-fecrazy over tho los nr tho opportunity to onload his statUtlcks upon th FiUIpe noro. and I hardly knu what bat I All communication I Miattare uf mw He Mnlira n IMIjcrliiiaBC to notion to finally rose to the hlto nr the occsshun I ilnlna lo Itils rnlaixn .hnnl.1 b a..lt-- nt i and introodooced raisclf 1I tayin, "I am t,n. Ataiannaa, lwfiHintt Kv. Interview UtltTdrd Alklnaon and n Dhnlcrnt frum tho Rtnlt nr Noo Ger-se"lVni Sarprlied to Find Hint Flnrln and I am set afloat cz a pernmboo-loti- n Tb ailrantaira ol a bank aeconnl an Mr. Mnimoti 1 In Hoy, of Orconvillv, ngmtr on a. II la not to builarta men mUshunary bl our mutual frond, Is visiting frlontlH lioro tlilH week. Punch nnd Jooil)-.- " we ata lalalnr, -- iber anow all about G rover Cleveland, hoo Ix lookln abed tu laailailel man, ( caiatra Copyrlrjht. 1SS3, by American Press AssoMr. MnKoi) Hay so, who has boon the next nashunal enmpan tu seo If and la woman Tbfle't tjlclr It tbo ciation. bank It a gooj one. Tbeia'a contan. air enny sines ur rcnurcctlon fer sick for two weeks, Is yot vory sick. thare lencr-l- ha rnonrjr alwaja trad and Ari'LEJACK FAn, WICII 13 kext tu free trald and revenoo reform, or If g Mrs. Campbell Is on tho sick list. out of reach ot tour own ptltr Gnovtn Cleveland's, in Tne btait kin be duno In the Interest ur loo, II la raaj 10 apend amall anma when ou hat a lata aam In Itovs. Carter, llowiuan.niul Htoard vy Noo Gkiisev. "I'm afrado not." sed Mr. Ator wxkt. kinson, Interrtptln me. "Ml statUtlcks f visited Karlliigton Inst week. Tu tho Edltur: ho thet wen 0,459,3701) men roto fcr I hcv Jest bin down tu IJoston, wlch Ix Dock Nichols wns nt thu street MADISONVILL12, - KENTUCKY ccrtin measure, and 7,107,371 men fair yon seo. In tho stnlt uv Mnssachoosctfs, fcr the a voto sumtbln else, and 3,070,407 purpus ur swappin convcrsnshun with men fer fer a substltoot proposition, the Mrs. J.oslo HntclllTo ami Mr. vote Mr. Edward Atkinson, hoo rcscntly run chances aro 10 tu 1 thet tho differentia-shu- n 1orko8 wcro married Biimlny nlKht s Department and up agin tho ur main logarithm will becum tn nt tho Methodist Church. succeeded In cittin sum ur his llteratoor kompllcatcd fer the averago cotnprchen Times nro iroltlnir hotter In our ANNOUNCEMENTS pxclooded frum the mails. Mr. Atkinson shun, and that tho abstract proposUhun city. per cent" moves in tho most cxcloosive strklcs uv will fab bl about 09 Miss Lizzie Johnson nml Mr. Adam I tliot the man wuz crazy fer shoor, aud hex tho kail the Ronton 1 ha llllnoli Central bow and haste tu remark, "I tea 3ault wcro married nt Kvniisvllllo on tala. and will com statUtlcks kin lc mado a satis- then, now.I made piano cz dalite; wencvir Iba aam aaltt Sco It all It Iz but will Sunday. factory lubstlloot fcr bectstake nnd veg- yu kindly tell mo whnt In thunder yu air leather to, tsas, round lilp Wliv do von throw stones at n fel tanimer loafitt licketa lieu Ho liez kin able tu figcer oat playln Punch and Joody fcr, In yoor par-loetables. IV tminlionlta llnea In lUaSootn low? how n Inberlu man cood lire and gro fat to a tarK ittt 01 ivaiwci f aioiia in lb North. Ita iaM doubt Tho iiicotliiRB nro becoming very on four cents a meet, it ho patronlted the "Ez a Trend tn Grorcr I will da so," Chlcaro, Cincinnati Interesting nt thu A. M K. Inn daily terflr lo til. Uulf, lo leacli qnlckly end stoves and tin kittles and dinner pales sed lie. "This outfit is desined tu soothe and 'liureli;simiors are IkjIiijt convortcd. coralotliblj Ibaenablca on letoila ol Vitttiaia, lb mountain tutu wlch Mr. Atkinson lied thrown hlz nud kumfcrt me. I her dressed up these Kov. Willi Mouniawa aau ncaaiu pt whole (tola V3 nn Inventor. Doorln tho dummies tu represent tho grata confllck gives T. A. Itrowii, M. 1)., avniigcllst iiieThnuiand lalanda. Iba lak and nmw toKinu,, lotell laiotta. gniti on between tbo Ameriklns nnd tho Koino stirring sermons and "hard tlmcn" under Mr. Cleveland's ' after at Micbion, WUcooiin and Minnetota, lb Hot. Filllpccnoze wharo our Yoonited Btalts will continue with us until Alkantat, he wux the right bower ur solgcrs air tJclag unonnttttooshunally em- Sunday, the Ifitli lust. Holms nr- - Spring olColorado. me vetiowaton rata or resottiof kalamlty ami tho king pin ur dcstltoo-vku- ployed fer tu crush nnd subjoogalt that rnuireu to iiavo jiieotfmrH for tlm Ho cood tako a hungry man hoo lofty patriot Agwlnaldoo and Ids uncloth- children every ovenliignftor school A new ilo3 edition, mutely lied lost his job, nnd hoo wuz vnutly ed followers hoo air hungcrln nnd thlrstin hours aud reijueHts that parents lewiiitrn, and iin lactn nd condtllom, biouthl dowa In search uv anuthcr fer liberty and Independence. I set thew allow thuir children to remain from walkln the streets lo dale, ot iba UrnHr one, and konvinro him hi pamphlets and little flggcra tu iHcin and I find It Is the four to Jivn o'clock as thev aro . to .1irir .. 1 i now "Aotiiurin collums uv Aggers tbet ho wuz gllty uv only placo whare tho Fllllpecnozo dont direct, mini mo kciiooiiioiiso io nut MnmnCnniflirC git licked." That will enough. I floo church. Tho Doctor Is bolug kindly llUIllvO wUlLvl 0 intl been Hlura. Ia wastefulness nnd shameful extravagance llluMrat- a frum hlz prenence, and I her been asktn cared for by Jtuv. J. M. Hurt and If he wanted tu eat moro fodder In twenty-frl pamphltl, conuiat a lue nntxr tnlsrlf crer sence, whut her wo gained bl family. Anyone wishing Christian ol letlera ft cm noiiuvrn laiMiri our UlnO hours tli an cood Iks bought for wnstela tlmpathy on 'n man hooio pa- counsel may call from 10 to II o'clock 00 lb UlilUU oowptoipeiwiilrl locatedKailtoad Kbla thirteen cents nnd twenty-sevesixtieths triotism Iz measured 'bl perccntago and a. m. ot lb llllnoli Central lb Slatea o( Kentucky, Tcnneate, Mllllltlp(i ur a mill, tic cood go before a konTcn-shu- n Punch and Joody? ftn.1 tAnium and alui a detailed wrtta.UD ol tb A i'KW THAT'H. uv old maids and fill cm up with and Itov. Ilnnvn has boon earnestly cities, lownt and connltjroa mo adjacent laibai hggcrs tu provo thet ttm wuz llrlu too in icrich vt h 10 nomeaeearra. showing sinners tho llllilo wny of line. ibia pauiphlel will or lurniib re liable luteal farm, gay if tha didn't yoose hlz tiu ovena tu renrnlDe tli molt iindlng tho Tiord. Thnt'rt preaching. on portion of Iba South. aereaiibla and Tr01tr. rook in. On ull occathuus whare statls-tick- s 1'rr copiat can be bad wuz wnntcd and not much else-- Mr. Three uowly married couples In By appi)in( 10 tue neateit 01 luc uuairiicuwi In Touch With All Spiritual Work. Atkinson cood nhvazo le depended the city Hiinday. Wedding hells nro on tu furnish cm In enny quantity thet A pastor should be in touch with ev- yet chiming softly. That's agreeTiekali and lull Information aa lo ralea la on- wuz necessary tu bak up enny causo thet ery part of the congregational work, so ment. neclloa with tho aboro can ba bad ol ateou ol needed braclu up. Mr. Cleveland early far as to know that all Is being carried o lb "Central" and conneclioK lluea. "V. C. Orion, a member of tha perxcertd how yooscful slcli n man cood on, but he shonld hare direct part in ComiiiitU'o of Second C. I). S. G Hitcb, 9lf. Pal. Agint, Clnottwall, bo tu him wen hiz idces upon revenoo and Teacher's Association, visited tho John A. Scott, DIt. Put. Ajaat, Miatakli. the tariff wuz rapidly growln unpopular all the spiritual work. If he la a city Saturday in Interest of said asWat Uarraf, Oil Pan. Agial, New Oiltattt. with the labcriu Dlmlcrats. Then It wuz stranger In th Sabbath school nnd sociation, is plaiiiiinir for tho thet he sot Mr. Atkinson tu figgerln and. young pcoplo'a meoting, he will find association lie meet hero. Many that tbo bonds between hi m and his nave iiiedgou to mm tueir support lit A. H. Htntan, Q, P. A. W, A. Kalioad, A. 0. P. A. firln oft pamphlets and bulletins to atChlcagt, LoiIiiHU. tract publlck r.ttenshun audi deklaxa Uiat pooplo aro not Increasing in strength cr that etlorL, His Interest in tho af everything wuz lovely ez wages ent tenderness. United Presbyterian. fair will iMtjrot Interest. That's In down nud men and wimmen thrown out fltieuce. you Are Going tfofth. ur employment bl the shuttln up or the f Be Not Afraid. When yon wish to know whether mills and workshops. When ft cr your pirn tuDiic ut anything Is right or Just, npply it to Dttk clouJj ot sorrow twerp. I menshun thesa fncU only tu tho how You Aro Going South, yourseu. rum's a lost. And you. Iron nature' glidnm. much ho wuz npprcshlatcd doorln GraDo turn away to weep, ver's glorious adiulnlatrnshun, nnd how If you earn throo dollars flpend Tbrrc la a loflos Karlour You Aro Going one savo the two. Tlint's common reddy wo air tu tie tu him agin it Ije kin Wbo comfort can beatowj figger out how wo kin win in 1000. sense. lilt treat beart long to aid you; Uv lalt he hcz lxcn devotln his oxcloo-sir- o Your torrow II dotb knuw. You Aro Going To Stimulate a Slotilth Llrer, llanlili Bllloua- nttenshun tu nsulstin the Filllpccnozo ueif, Dliper.e lljrapepala, 1'iCTent Sick and lion her been at war with tho Yoonited ;,.J Upon the Croat Ita tuffered UHCHAar. TICKET VIA THt u Nervoul lload.-xbDr. M A. Slumona .. mvi. u.a juu van iviivci.r, Stnlts. Wcncvcr tha hcv bin flblo tu hold Liter Uediclur. That He might bcal your lieaitacbe, our solgcrs in check, or shoot a pizencd f You're only to believe. urrcr Intu cm, hlz hart hcz overflowed 3 Oh, bear tha worde ot Jeaut, W. A. Nibiirt, Prcshlont. with gratltood. Ho hcz sot Aguinaldo up 3 Wlio for you pardon paid! O. W. WAimu.L, Cnshlor. higher than Old Georgo Washington, nnd V "Let not )our heart be troubled, Kor let It U afraid." suld tu him in subbtanco "Yu must lick tli kussld Amcrikin snlgers who air Then itrlre, tad heart, to trait lilm. yu ur ycr liberties, and then wo Though dreary be tha day, kin du sumtbln fcr yu. I will onload: For lie baa aurely promlMd Louiavine Haativiitr. R. H. sum pamphlets ontu tho Amerjkln army All tern to wipe awaj; thet ort tu malk It a littlo eazlcr fer yui And lead wlieri clouda ot aorrow tu du tho Job." No more no caat their ihade. and aa crcuna "Let ix.t your heart b troubled. Then Sir. Atkinson got Intu trubble Madisonville, Kv. Not let It be alrald." fcr jest cz ho commenst tu onload tho The, -S- electcd. . llteratoor desined tu aid tho Filllpccnoze, - - - S50.0W. True Friendship, J a wicked aud pcrvcrso .adralnlstrashun ' Th Maximum Trno friendship la born 'from trne sed he sboodn't du it. The President and ti I'oslmastcr-Gcnera- l la trno re Ml , Traiwactswt'sral biknig"h-M-SHtho sed It wuz bad character. Ho or eho who Invites tho account of t&o cnuff fer our solgcrs tu her to fito niggers, Is trno to every liody. Those wbo prov The Maximum Comfuib snnkes, nnd tho thermometer, without themselves to bo always loyal, aVSaya citizens of Hopkins nud mljointae cuuuiios. bcin fired on frum tho rear. Tliareforo tin, yet trno, and upright -Has tho flnost ami most socrm Tho Minimum Rate?. tha croocliy denied him tho prlvlllgo ur kind frankafraia not tq,(9Xap41rseBt ns and. vault In tills section af Kontuoky. the malls, and Jlabolllckly deprived him wife onr own uv tho konstttooshuuat right tu raze that not afraid Hatea.Tlae anil nit other Inforcuttm rf3 Dovil. That Iz wun reezon why I went good-J-aAkett beantlfnlly 60 YEARS' be caeerfMly furalibcj by down tu Moston tu sco him. I wanted tu tkjr; leadoraof tho bosom. EXPERIENCE I express mi slmpathy fcr Mm and tu c. p. ATMonr, o. r. .. 'Iwre oarselvea that we are, nnd ashoor him that our 2 harts Lect cz was, oewpllinont onr affections in thoirs. Or by Ioobvhjjj. rffj with Mr. Cleveland's thrown In. I lte Love Is tho synonym of Qod, and f rlend-shi- p wanted tu sco how much uv n d!sturbM W. W. ETHRIDGE, Agent. Is so closely akin to it that love rf ttwfc ftit l.lm nAKinllAla at If r lstt U (IUSIU1I till IUU Hfl- r. uiu ur nun tu uji, mm n um- rCMtlV clothes it in its own beanty. If wo wero strength tlm hed cz voterstu ySo!toomot moro earnest in exercising tbo trno tha wuz raisin. In making,,. ka)cuiB. spirit of roligion, true friendship wonld Trade Marks Dt signs shuns fcr next year wo hejr foaad ihet jt not bo such a rare thing, nnd ho world COPYRIGHT-A- c., o i. uu iu iK.ju.im B ch upon ,n(1 would bo made tho brighter and trner. Anyon tending ft iketth and deierlMton m&r Will receive prompt atten n itttk- -r tn Votes nlr whut h. e?'n tn kount Rnd opinion raloklr ) Julia Tcreea Bnbler in Catholic UnU InTentlonuoerUln oar patentabhf ConmaniraM )i probably whare tu git caBftsj ,3 hut ,8 pnl. verse. oonwaoimai. iianaDooozkriuaoa anuuiVMt this office. EstitnateF tion for ttcurinii utnta- lrul and snachln ub bald 1'jUabU taken tbrouah Mann A CbtMctt- J furnisherJ upon application. tfeeialnbtlc. wltliout charo. la tho It Saved Her Life. "C." 'vKjIed'iiponMr. Atkinson I wuz Miss Mnmie Smith, MhldlcsborOj gratclyMrprisca tu flnd bIm p,ajrn Ky., writes: My littlo ulster had tho Tho twonty-ll- f ill weekly A handiomely Jih he1 il:5ftBd JooAy nsuch Pnr,or- - regular Croup vory bad. I gavo her sovernl dilation of Anylllaitrattxl lounial. !nre- - cVr of tho Mississippi annual convention Vnlloy .Medical clontitio Tcniat ez tho up n box year i tour roonius, 91 ootti uyoii nowativauttrr. Koloy'fl Honey and Association wart oponed Tuesday ACach and Joody performers yooee, and dosos of Instantly relloyod. Tar nnd fternoon and will continue till (cto NN&Cn.38IB..dw.r.HBWTKfr she was It saveil wt nockln tho littlo ImoRcs.nbout In Hraucu OWoa, flat V BL, Waablogton, U. C jber7. her life, Campbell & Co, ur fiterus. !, te,M. tau; y, JNO. G.MORTON. BANK KK. It-- bol iuin-tierin- enny-thin- ." 0 11-1- 3 Post-OIIl- Illinois Central It. ii. TOURIST Tn 0 benn-cater- i rr n. Southern n..lAn a n Kxe-cutiv- wt , 4tf 1 If If ns. If Wrct; ln t HOPKINS COUNTY V -- BAN f CiffilSp,- Mexiwtf&vrJj of Spf!, of JJd ' of i) re tB torsive wtt ..j,e '' to Ijrnjra rr. JOB WORK at -- j iiin! wtthJd' 25y n Scientific Jittieriaut. , ' . J- -